Posted on 04/28/2005 10:13:06 AM PDT by varina davis
Strange way the fiance brought up the "weirdest case of cold feet" comment last night. It seemed suspicious to me...Like, why would he even consider that?
?....is this a Washington, D.C. copy-cat type staging?
:-(
That is one big wedding!
He is way too calm, also notice the constant twitching in his left eye as he talks. Hmmmmm, sure is a "weird" way to back out of a marriage ceremony.
Cold feet? More like stage fright.
Has the fiancee mentioned where he was when she went missing? When was the last time she was seen by anyone other than him?
I did think he acted rather non-plussed, but maybe that was just being on camera.
Good God. That's not a wedding. It's a unisex chorus line.
(saith the woman who hates girlie things like big fairy-tale weddings)
I thought my wedding, with eight groomsmen and bridesmaids, had a lot of people involved. mine pales in comparison.
he does appear to volunteer that too quickly.
It was a cop who first said the "cold feet" line. The fiance was just refuting the cop. I do agree he acted strangely on TV, but I'm not sure how he was supposed to act, either.
He killed her. When women "go missing" it's almost always because the husband or boyfriend killed them. You'd think that they'd have enough sense to come up with a better story than the old "she went walking" or "she went jogging" story. Peterson said his wife went to walk the dog, Hacking said his wife went jogging....
Article on Fox at http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,154880,00.html includes her diamond in the things she left behind. I don't know about anyone else, but I NEVER left my diamond anywhere. It was always with me. This alone makes her disappearance seem very suspicious to me.
Fiance is my choice of perp.
yeah. My ceremony was equally short. I edited down the raw footage from my ceremony and kept track of the total time.from the start of the processional for the groomsmen/bridesmaids to when she came out, was actually longer than the rest of the ceremony.
The fiance said "if it was cold feet, it's the strangest case of cold feet i've ever seen".
That is a wierd thing to say under the circumstances. It sounds contrived. It sounds like something a defense lawyer on TV would say.
"Mason, who had just returned from a run himself, said Wilbanks prefers to run by herself, but she doesnt just go and run and hide."
That must explain the excessive sweat build-up and the sweaty shoes and clothes he had on him when the detectives arrived. I wonder if they asked him for his jogging clothes?
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