dnewton3
Staff member
http://www.ntd.tv/2018/02/19/daughter-sets-up-father-to-be-carjacked-by-2-other-teens/
Looking at the photo mug-shot, the girl looks very young and innocent appearing.
I think the reality is far from that.
Read the article. Dad has daughter in car. They get carjacked and kidnapped. Drive to the home. Dad gets out of car and bolts to front door, and locks it, leaving his daughter outside with the attackers! What kind of dad would abandon his own daughter with thugs; so innocent appearing?
Now watch the video. Pay close attention to the video towards the end. When the daughter is taken into custody, she does not cry, whine, complain, deny or even flinch. And, her dad standing there didn't object at all, either.
I am willing to go out on a limb here and guess these are true conditions:
1) not her first time in cuffs
2) no shock on her part for being arrested, because she's adept in the "system", and knows her complicit nature in the crime
My guess is that she's a problem child and has been in trouble before. When the carjacking happened, dad's "sixth sense" kicked in and suspected his daughter was culpable. Hence, he bolted for the door and locker her outside. Can I prove this? Not at this point. But 23 years of LEO experience makes me able to read between the lines. Clearly the cops at the scene had probable cause for the arrest; that didn't come out of the blue, and dad didn't complain one bit. She didn't object one bit.
And, it is quite possible that murder was the ultimate intent. They told him to drive back to his house. Their identity was not obscured that we know of. Who robs a person at gunpoint and kidnaps them, but does not cover their face? They probably were going to kill him, and with no "witness" (daughter plays innocent) there's no trail to follow in terms of identity.
Pictures can be deceiving; she's not nearly as innocent as she looks in that photo. She's evil.
$75,000 bail/bond. Dad and mom (presumably a mother present?) are not going to pony up the funds for her. She's 17; probably will be in the system long enough to make it to 18, and they can kick her out. Or maybe even have enough to claim "emancipation" and get her out prior to 18. Making for an awkward family reunion.
Looking at the photo mug-shot, the girl looks very young and innocent appearing.
I think the reality is far from that.
Read the article. Dad has daughter in car. They get carjacked and kidnapped. Drive to the home. Dad gets out of car and bolts to front door, and locks it, leaving his daughter outside with the attackers! What kind of dad would abandon his own daughter with thugs; so innocent appearing?
Now watch the video. Pay close attention to the video towards the end. When the daughter is taken into custody, she does not cry, whine, complain, deny or even flinch. And, her dad standing there didn't object at all, either.
I am willing to go out on a limb here and guess these are true conditions:
1) not her first time in cuffs
2) no shock on her part for being arrested, because she's adept in the "system", and knows her complicit nature in the crime
My guess is that she's a problem child and has been in trouble before. When the carjacking happened, dad's "sixth sense" kicked in and suspected his daughter was culpable. Hence, he bolted for the door and locker her outside. Can I prove this? Not at this point. But 23 years of LEO experience makes me able to read between the lines. Clearly the cops at the scene had probable cause for the arrest; that didn't come out of the blue, and dad didn't complain one bit. She didn't object one bit.
And, it is quite possible that murder was the ultimate intent. They told him to drive back to his house. Their identity was not obscured that we know of. Who robs a person at gunpoint and kidnaps them, but does not cover their face? They probably were going to kill him, and with no "witness" (daughter plays innocent) there's no trail to follow in terms of identity.
Pictures can be deceiving; she's not nearly as innocent as she looks in that photo. She's evil.
$75,000 bail/bond. Dad and mom (presumably a mother present?) are not going to pony up the funds for her. She's 17; probably will be in the system long enough to make it to 18, and they can kick her out. Or maybe even have enough to claim "emancipation" and get her out prior to 18. Making for an awkward family reunion.
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