Originally posted by c.d.
View Post
It has been some time, Im good, hope you are as well.
I believe youve struck upon the main point here cd,.. because we have no evidence that something happened it is "unreasonable" to state that such an occurrence was "probable" or "likely" nonetheless. Without any evidence to support a belief it is little more than that, and in this instance the evidence does not indicate we should be considering a scenario where the killer is left unsatisfied or unable to complete his goal.
Your point is valid,.... what if something, anything, had scared him off after the throat cut and before anything else may have happened. How would we know?
We would see some evidence cd. A man seen scurrying away by Louis or Fanny, Liz turned onto her back, Liz looking like she was hastily discarded, not looking as if "gently lain down",... there are many ways of determining what may likely have occurred using only the crime scene evidence.
The evidence here suggests that the killer just let go of her scarf when she lay on her side bleeding out, and he left her there in his own good time, and on his own terms. He was not evidently chased away.
There is as much evidence for speculating he stood there and watched her for a minute or two as there is for suggesting he was interrupted, neither suggestion is warranted based on that criteria.
Cheers cd
Comment