To: Eva
I would venture to bet that if Klass hadn't been on every station dissaproving of the Uncle, most people would have felt sorry for him and felt he was simply distressed beyond belief that his niece had dissapeared.
189 posted on
06/13/2002 10:15:54 PM PDT by
bonfire
To: bonfire
I thought the uncle was strange before Klass ever got to the scene. The uncle was weird in the first interview. I told my husband right then that there was something strange about the story. Part of what makes the guy seem so strange is that he isn't acting stressed out. He's always got that brain dead smile on his face. He just isn't effective and he sure isn't motivating. He makes it appear as though the family would rather just handle the situation by themselves.
191 posted on
06/13/2002 10:28:26 PM PDT by
Eva
To: bonfire
I would venture to bet that if Klass hadn't been on every station dissaproving of the Uncle, most people would have felt sorry for him and felt he was simply distressed beyond belief that his niece had dissapeared. Put yourself, for a moment, in Klaas' situation: Knowing the horror and panic that happens when your daughter is abducted by a stranger, you go to Utah to coordinate the services of a sketch artist whose work resulted in the arrest and conviction of your daughter's kidnapper, rapist, and killer, Richard Allen Davis.
And the family says, "No."
What would YOU think?
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