The concern about preserving a crime scene is until the crime scene is processed for evidence. Once you have the evidence, the crime scene is released.
There's no issue with washing a released crime scene. There's businesses that specialize in cleaning up crime scenes.
I know a little about that type business, my uncle used to do that w crime scenes and I think house fires also. I recall hearing that it was lucrative.
Anyway I am not saying they shouldn't clean up once released, I just found it surprising they were done processing so quickly after, like the next morning almost
Perhaps because it was such a bare crime scene to begin with??
Like before he got there it was bare roof,
It wasn't like you'd have a lot of history of people going to that spot. Where you'd have to figure out what was from the day of the crime and what just existed there before like the a timeline type of thing. They would have witness statements saying exactly when he climbed on the roof.
Not a lot of carpet to take fibers from. Not a lot of fingerprints that would be relevant. I guess maybe his fingerprints would be relevant.
My guess is the the entirety of evidence is his body and what he brought on the roof, his gun etc. Not a lot of clutter to go through.
So the attempted assassination of the Presidential frontrunner, in which all evidence is pointing to a larger conspiracy run by his opponents in the government, only requires a day or so to process? Lunacy. Are you part of the clean up crew? Sent to assure the sheep that everything here is normal?
Its funny that all these handshakes have suddenly appeared as the voice of reason and normalcy.
So the attempted assassination of the Presidential frontrunner, in which all evidence is pointing to a larger conspiracy run by his opponents in the government, only requires a day or so to process? Lunacy.
Not lunacy, Logic.
The impact of the crime has nothing to do with how long the crime scene takes to evaluate.
The crime scene is either complex or it's not.
What did I miss? Why would this scene take more than 3 hours to process once all the right people are there?
As for me? I'm just a guy on his phone trying not to jump to conclusions.
The concern about preserving a crime scene is until the crime scene is processed for evidence. Once you have the evidence, the crime scene is released.
There's no issue with washing a released crime scene. There's businesses that specialize in cleaning up crime scenes.
I know a little about that type business, my uncle used to do that w crime scenes and I think house fires also. I recall hearing that it was lucrative.
Anyway I am not saying they shouldn't clean up once released, I just found it surprising they were done processing so quickly after, like the next morning almost
Perhaps because it was such a bare crime scene to begin with??
Like before he got there it was bare roof,
It wasn't like you'd have a lot of history of people going to that spot. Where you'd have to figure out what was from the day of the crime and what just existed there before like the a timeline type of thing. They would have witness statements saying exactly when he climbed on the roof.
Not a lot of carpet to take fibers from. Not a lot of fingerprints that would be relevant. I guess maybe his fingerprints would be relevant.
My guess is the the entirety of evidence is his body and what he brought on the roof, his gun etc. Not a lot of clutter to go through.
So the attempted assassination of the Presidential frontrunner, in which all evidence is pointing to a larger conspiracy run by his opponents in the government, only requires a day or so to process? Lunacy. Are you part of the clean up crew? Sent to assure the sheep that everything here is normal?
Its funny that all these handshakes have suddenly appeared as the voice of reason and normalcy.
Not lunacy, Logic.
The impact of the crime has nothing to do with how long the crime scene takes to evaluate.
The crime scene is either complex or it's not.
What did I miss? Why would this scene take more than 3 hours to process once all the right people are there?
As for me? I'm just a guy on his phone trying not to jump to conclusions.
Mr Kaplan, Inc....