Posted on 01/07/2023 2:54:43 PM PST by bitt
I think he went back to the scene the next morning (actually the same morning) to look for the knife sheath.
He didn’t know where he dropped it - inside the apartment or outside. It was his father’s knife.
and the state has had great problems in securing the relevant drugs.
= = =
I’ll bet Idaho and Washington students can get together and find enough ‘relevant’ drugs.
Or a Chem Major can make them.
This guy is proof of how broken our society is.
And how did nobody flee, or warn the others. How did it not end up the type of mess one you would expect from a single scrawny guy vs six college kids in five different rooms, in a residence he had no intelligence on?
Something strange about this, even before you consider Kaylee was under some type of government/professional harassment surveillance.
4chan found several chats the murderer was having.
How do you leave a knife sheath at the scene? He had to know about it since he took the knife. It seems he deliberately left the sheath behind.
Because he's an idiot, obviously. Either he didn't have it secured to his belt, or it was pulled off as part of a struggle. Either way, only an idiot leaves it behind, because it's almost as bad as leaving the actual weapon, because it allowed them to ID the exact weapon, immediately.
done
Fentanyl seems popular these days... why not use that?
He already has a public defender and has stated so to the judge.
Thanks
Icing on the cake was police found his DNA on the button of the knife sheath left behind - a nice big win for the good guys and one big fat stupid blunder for the bragging psychopath.
Even better? Idaho has the death penalty...
Where did you get the information it was his fathers knife? I’ve ;ot seen that anywhere and I’ve looked. Can you put up a source?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.