Posted on 07/29/2004 11:09:00 AM PDT by Bonaparte
Husband's 'perfect' past keeps crumbling
Suspicions: As blood is reported found in the Hackings' apartment, an ex-missionary says Mark was booted from a mission in Canada By Matt Canham The Salt Lake Tribune
Salt Lake Tribune
2004-07-29 02:34:31.886
Small amounts of blood are among the evidence taken last week from the apartment of Lori Hacking, according to a source familiar with the investigation. But detectives won't have a definitive answer on whose blood it is anytime soon. State forensic experts assisted Salt Lake City police last week in searching the missing woman's apartment, seizing bags of evidence and a box spring. Some of the evidence was sent to the state crime laboratory, but test results may take "weeks, if not months," said Detective Phil Eslinger. Meanwhile, police late Wednesday and early today were continuing the arduous task of sifting through thousands of tons of garbage at the Salt Lake County landfill, ostensibly in search of a body - although they acknowledge the difficulty of the effort. "You could hide a car in there and never find it," said Detective Dwayne Baird. "They literally have a mountain of stuff to go through. It could take months to go through." Meanwhile, attention continues to focus on Mark Hacking, who first reported his wife missing at 10:49 a.m. on July 19, claiming she never returned from a jog in City Creek Canyon. Police now question whether Lori was ever at the canyon, even though her car was found nearby. "We are not certain she was ever up there," Baird said. "We have found nothing that would indicate she was." Police have no information about Lori Hacking's whereabouts on July 19, and say, though she remains a missing person case, her disappearance has "very, very suspicious circumstances," Baird said. Mark Hacking's comments, including those he made in his initial call, are now being questioned by police, who no longer consider him cooperative. "When you don't get anything from what he is saying, do you call it cooperative? Probably not," Baird said. "We have had to make sure we double and triple check. He has a history of failing to tell the truth. It takes so much time to sift through." Mark Hacking told family and friends that he had graduated from the University of Utah and had been accepted to the medical school at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. Police informed the family that Hacking had been lying. He never graduated from the U. and never applied to medical school. Police say Hacking's story has other holes, and his misrepresentations could go back for years. "Medical school was the pinnacle of that deception," Baird said. The son of a respected Orem doctor and fifth of seven children, Hacking was known in the Winnipeg, Canada, district where he served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the mid-1990s as a person with extremely bright prospects who also talked often of his girlfriend Lori, whom he had met while in high school, according to some fellow missionaries. But at least one former missionary said Hacking was also prone to breaking the rules - and claims that resulted in a "worthiness hearing" and a premature trip back to Utah. "My companion and myself steered clear when females would come over to the apartment so that we would not be caught up in that specific area of disobedience," said Michael Turner, who joined the Winnipeg mission in 1996 and claims Hacking was having a relationship with a recent convert. "It was a bit more than just holding hands and passionate kissing on the lips," Turner said. "That is what got him sent home." Turner said Hacking also tried to convince his fellow missionaries to "live it up" before he was sent home. "I wrote it off as crazy talk, but he was all of the sudden on the other side of the spectrum," Turner said. "He was wanting to get some alcohol and get plowed, go gambling." Meanwhile, police say Hacking remains a patient in the University Neuropsychiatric Institute, where he was admitted the night after he reported his wife missing. "When they are done with him, he is free to leave," Eslinger said. This is despite the fact that he remains a "person of interest" in his wife's disappearance, which in the lexicon of the Salt Lake City Police Department is less than a "suspect." "A person of interest is someone that is looked at closely in regards to the case," said Eslinger. "It's someone that you need to look at a lot closer than just an interview, but there's not enough to actually say, 'You know what? We feel this person did it.' '' Police say the last time they spoke with Mark Hacking was a week ago, the same day Hacking hired attorney Gilbert Athay. Athay says he regularly visits Hacking. "Everyday. And I will continue to do so." He declined to discuss Hacking's demeanor but said his client was coherent. Earlier this week, Lori Hacking's family called off their request for the public's help in searching for Lori, as they tried to regroup and determine where to send specialized groups to comb more rugged terrain. The family has declined to comment on the search or any other aspect of Lori's disappearance for the time being according to a woman who answered the search center phone number. All correspondence between the center and the family is now via e-mail, she said. mcanham@sltrib.com --- Tribune reporters Ashley Broughton, Kirsten Stewart and Brent Israelsen contributed to this article.
Isn't there a law against this??? What a coward this MARK is.
A fair exhortation to READ, READ, READ.
It's just a pet peeve of mine. I eagerly want to read a post and then see a mass of words and my tired eyes just have to forego it. Really annoys me. My lack of patience. My bad. Sorry.
Have done it a few times myself but try and immediately correct it. And now have myself PRETTY well trained to preview big posts first.
And, to avoid them getting zapped in process, am even scribing more in WORD first.
You are right, I didn't take the time to read the whole thread and would have, no doubt, seen your corrections etc. had I read further.
Was mostly trying to do what I could to help prevent it again by someone who may have been a new FR member, for all I knew.
Thanks for your patience with me.
Blessings to you and yours.
The church doesn't foot the bill for missionaries. The families do, or the missionaries themselves, by saving.
But your point is still well taken.
LOL--what we need is a No Whine Zone!
Oh great, now my eyes are gushing blood.
I'm so sick-to-death of people who make these wild assumptions on these threads! Who died and made YOU a psychoanalyst. Gosh! I mean, ASSume this and ASSume that and pin motivations on people, it's nuts! Gripe gripe gripe grouse grouse grouse....
So Matt PERSONALLY booted Mark out of Canada.
Huh.
Go figure.
Fox News says there is a mystery witness that they got put under court order to keep witness secret-this was done 2 days after Lori went missing.
How long before Nat. Enquirer finds this gal Mark was messing around with in Canada?
The latest. Kind of a rehash.
Police Search Landfill in Hacking Investigation
Investigators on the Lori Hacking case spent another night searching the county landfill. They won't say what they are finding or even what they are looking for, but they do say they have several promising leads.
Investigators are also awaiting results of forensic tests from possible evidence that's been collected.
Police are still treating this case as a 'missing persons' case and not a homicide investigation. As investigators continue to look for clues, forensic tests may yield some valuable evidence.
Sifting for clues in the Salt Lake County landfill is a long process. Crews are covering acres of land, and areas as deep as 45 feet. It's day four and so far the search has come up empty.
Det. Phil Eslinger, Salt Lake City Police Dept.: To my knowledge, at this point in time, nothing of consequence has been found out there.
But police remain optimistic in this case. And they're talking to other people who they're not identifying as either possible witnesses or suspects.
Det. Phil Eslinger: "The leads that we are following right now are very promising, and we feel very confident of the case that we are currently putting together."
Investigators say numerous items have been sent to the state crime lab, including samples from a garbage can containing brown fluid. Neighbor Devan Hite called police last week to report it.
Devan Hite: "There was a very strong, abnormal smell in the garbage pail that is sort of reeking from it. When I opened it up, there were hundreds of maggots all along the side of it."
The results from the sample and other tests could take weeks. Still, Forensic Services Director Stu Smith says, in a mystery like this, police don't always know what they're looking for.
Stu Smith, Director, Bureau of Forensice Services: "In a case where no arrest has been made, no victim has been found, and it's been a true whodunit case, it becomes much more complex, because it's hard to know what's evidence."
The state lab is a relatively small agency - - another reason testing can take a while. However, Smith says cases like this may take priority because of certain circumstances - - for example, if there's a risk to the community or if a victim is still missing and there's a chance that person can still be saved.
They concentrated on a trench in the west end of the landfill, focusing their lights on one particular area, and set off some flashes, possibly from a camera. But we haven't yet confirmed if they were taking pictures.
Yesterday, police told us that they are also working on a timeline that would show the events leading up to Lori's disappearance.
Investigators think Mark Hacking knows more than he's telling, but also say he may not even know where Lori is.
Police have called Mark Hacking a "person of interest" in the case, but not a suspect. KSL NewsRadio reports this morning that police may have more than one "person of interest" in the investigation.
Investigators are looking at some theories that don't involve Lori's husband Mark. Police won't name the other persons they're questioning, but say it's more than routine.
They're also questioning people that know the Hackings and are doing lab tests on evidence they've already collected.
They say it could be weeks, or months, before they get the results of those tests.
Det. Phil Eslinger/ Salt Lake City Police Dept.: "It's a fairly long process to make sure it's done properly, and that any evidence that is retrieved is admissable in court."
Police are also denying reports that Lori died in a rage killing.
Police also are not sure Lori ever made it to Memory Grove Park to jog the morning she was reported missing.
Detectives says police have found nothing to indicate she was ever there.
After the woman was reported missing by her husband who said she never returned from a jog at the park July 19, thousands of volunteers helped scour the area and nearby City Creek Canyon for the woman.
As for their search of the landfill, they haven't found any key evidence.
Detectives also say this case is like any other. Despite the fact that it's high profile, they are taking their time, doing everything thoroughly and properly.
What else could he do? The guy was crowding his action.
Isn't that called Astigmataism or something?
Besides, even the police have said there's no use in talking to him. According to them, he's a lying machine (in addition to his other talents).
Hehe. From your lips, uvular. (Now that's a phrase to ponder)
LOL--what we need is a No Whine Zone!
only if there is cheese there too
I didn't take notice of this part of your post until now.
I recall reading that they'd been trying to conceive for some time.
This could be one more instance of conflicting media reports.
Not if you know the territory. According to lady lawyer, who works right by this area in Salt Lake City, Memory Grove Park (which is adjacent to City Creek Canyon and shares Lori's jogging route with it) is a short walk from the Hacking apartment. The police believe Hacking drove her car to her usual parking spot in Memory Grove Park, then walked back home. IOW, there is plenty to indicate that somebody put that car there, but there is nothing to indicate that person was Lori, hence, nothing to indicate Lori was there at all that morning.
I was at a Dunkin' Donuts yesterday and one guy was there who had to weigh 500 pounds easy. He was unshaved, dressed sloppily and looked like he just rolled out of bed. The waistband of his pants was folded over and his huge gut was hanging way out.
The poor guy actually waddled to his car, lugging his bag of donuts and smoking a cigarette.
Does that guy have a death wish?
Thanks for the update!
Michael Moore?
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