Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Can You Find Hannah Graham?

I feel like we are being so Conditized:

Police resume search for missing U.Va. student
‘Person of interest’ sought in Virginia student search
Hundreds search for missing UVa student
Home of man seen with missing UVa student searched
Man charged in Va. disappearance

Also see: Virginia, Venezuela, and the VA 

I did find these:

Venezuela’s president is crafting a disaster

By standing up top AmeriKa, that's how.

Veterans Affairs plans pay boost to cure its doctor shortage

Yes, more money into a rotten and corrupt $y$tem will solve everything.

"For alleged Abigail Hernandez kidnapper, a life of mystery; The ways of suspect Nat Kibby among the puzzles in 9-month disappearance of N.H. teen Abby Hernandez" by Sally Jacobs | Globe Staff   September 18, 2014 

I'm really not interested in piecing them together, either. Sorry.

GORHAM, N.H. — Nat Kibby is regarded by many of his acquaintances as an eccentric man. And so when he bought a large, red container unit and parked it next to his trailer home four years ago no one thought much of it.

But Bob Chapman, who sold it to him, remembers there was something odd when he delivered the heavy metal unit. “There were cameras in every window of the trailer looking out. One in front, two on the side, and more in the back, recording. We just thought it was him being weird.”

Acting like the government is now suspicious?

Kibby put a “No Trespassing” sign near the container, which is the size of a couple of rooms.

Only valid where elite wealth or tyrannical government is located.

When a tow truck dropped his car at the site, Kibby barked at the driver to back off.

Video confirms this?

This spring, when police came to take possession of his guns — a condition of his bail on an assault charge — Kibby laid his arsenal on the road, apparently so the officers could seize them without getting close.

Unbeknown to any of them, 15-year-old Abby Hernandez — whose disappearance for nine months has piqued international interest — may have been locked in the big box just feet away. Prosecutors believe she was held against her will on Kibby’s property.

“Everyone can Monday night quarterback, but we had nothing to go off of at the time,” said Gorham police Officer Eric Benjamin.

The container unit, now cordoned off by a chain-link fence topped with barbed wire, is one of a number of puzzling details in a case that has become the subject of intense speculation in this northern New Hampshire town where many know one, if not all, of the players involved.

Not here, sorry.

Hernandez’s return home in July is extraordinary by most any measure: One national researcher says that the likelihood of a missing teen returning unharmed after so long is as low as 1 percent.

Who has the movie rights?

Kibby, 34, who is charged with one count of kidnapping, has both a lengthy criminal record and a personal history of erratic behavior. But the mystery of what happened to Hernandez, who has offered no public account since she came home, remains as murky as the day she returned. She did not return to Kennett High School when classes began earlier this month.

Btw, where is Darriean Hess?

Last month, Hernandez’s mother, Zenya, took on a team of three lawyers, a somewhat unusual move for a victim whose interests are generally represented by a prosecutor. In a brief telephone interview, Zenya Hernandez said the family is “literally, truly overwhelmed. I know it sounds funky, but they [the lawyers] will explain.”

Michael L. Coyne, dean elect of the Massachusetts School of Law in Andover, said he and the two New Hampshire attorneys also representing Abby Hernandez intend to “assist her with trying to get through to the other side of this nightmare.” Coyne, who mentioned that he was contacted by the Hernandez family through mutual friends, said he is cooperating with law enforcement.

Coyne has asked that the media give Hernandez some room. He issued a press release saying that the teenager, “wants some time and space to physically and emotionally heal. . . . Abby was violently abducted by a stranger. For many months, she suffered numerous acts of unspeakable violence.”

Then there are marks and stuff, right?

Hernandez, who lives primarily with her mother and sister in Conway, is expected to return to school when “the professionals think it is wise for her to return,” Coyne said. Some of the handful of friends who have seen her since she came back say she appears unchanged by her experience.

“She’s totally normal,” said Parish Dawe-Chadwick, a close friend. “It’s like she was never gone.”

Maybe she wasn't. 

This story is so stinky!

But the talk among other students is more complex.

Except she is not at school.

*****************

Over the next nine months the search for the amiable high school freshman was unflagging. Teams of law enforcement officials scoured the area with dogs and helicopters while family and friends held vigils and established Facebook pages dedicated to finding the missing teen. The soft-spoken Hernandez was a popular girl who loved to run track, and the financial rewards for her safe return mounted steadily.

Less than two weeks after she disappeared, Hernandez wrote a letter dated Oct. 22 to her mother that was received in early November, piquing hope that the teen was safe. Investigators have said the letter came through the postal system, but have declined to reveal what it said....

Or WHERE the POSTMARK was FROM! 

Oh, man, this stinks to high heaven! 

What she do, go willingly but now the family must save face?

Hernandez’s letter is intriguing for another reason. On the day she wrote it, Nat Kibby was arrested for possession of marijuana while driving erratically along the White Mountain Highway in North Conway, according to a Conway police report. When the officer asked him whether he had marijuana in the car, Kibby handed over a glass pipe, saying, “You’re going to get it one way or the other. I know what’s going to happen.”

Investigators have declined to address whether Hernandez was able to write her letter because Kibby, who was ultimately found guilty and fined $350, was detained that day.

If so, she would have had to have gotten out and not escaped. 

WTF? What a STENCH!

Hernandez has provided one other curious glimpse of her experience. While she was away, she occasionally saw the local newspaper, The Conway Daily Sun, which kept a daily tally of the number of days she was missing on an inside page. Shortly after her return, Hernandez visited the Sun office to thank the staff for remembering her. Hernandez, wearing a T-shirt saying “C.S.I. “Can’t Stand Idiots,” did not explain how she had been able to see the newspaper while in captivity.

But she's sucking hero reporter cock, so.... WOW. 

And what's with the attitude shirt for such a good girl?

During the 285 days she was missing, the State Police and FBI swung their net wide....

They threw back the storage bin?

--more--"

Also seeTrailer Trash in New Hampshire 

Time to throw this post out.