To: Bluntpoint
Sure I have. What's your point. I am discussing the issue of Dr. Laura's mother being murdered. I guess no one cares about who, what, how, why the woman was killed?
The issue seems to be that the two were estranged, which is easy for me to get past. I don't judge that, it happens all the time in the best of families.
Buh, bye. sw
116 posted on
12/21/2002 7:56:40 AM PST by
spectre
To: spectre
"I am discussing the issue of Dr. Laura's mother being murdered."
Got any clues?
Would you have us spectulate on how the crime occurred?
Discuss the possible gruesome details that we no nothing about?
Save your moral vanity for someone else.
To: spectre
I am discussing the issue of Dr. Laura's mother being murdered. I guess no one cares about who, what, how, why the woman was killed? In California, unless a physician is present at the time, a death is ALWAYS treated as a murder. This insures that the scene is treated as a crime scene and potential evidence isn't destroyed. As soon as an autopsy verifies a cause of thead, the staus will be updated.
Usually it turns out not to be murder.
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