JCady wrote:For that matter, Ender seems to be purposely misconstruing my statement about the inadequate investigation as referring to the second transgender death and not the first. I find it very suspicious that the Memphis police insist that they have NO suspects in Ms. Johnston's murder when the two ex police officers who were fired for brutalizing Ms. Johnston clearly have both the means and the motive to have committed that murder.
I think you need to be a hell of a lot clearer. At no point that I can see did you ever state that flat out and it would have spared a lot of trouble if you had.
That said, they probably are looking at them to an extent but to publicly name them as suspects (or even persons of interest) with out corroborating evidence would be highly damaging to the police and any future case. On the trial front, if they're wrong about it being the cops it makes a ready made defense and if they're right it can argued as undue prejudice of the jury pool. Police Departments and even the FBI have gotten sued and taken to the cleaners for calling people suspects when they could not substantiate the charges. What your suggesting they do is not only irresponsible, legally actionable, but also potentially damaging if any trial takes place. There's a damn good reason for the police to not shoot their mouths off which requires none of your more paranoid imaginings to be true.
Furthermore, while those ex-cops do have a motive and means, there is zero evidence to suggest they took the opportunity. That alone is enough to keep reasonable people from slinging around murder accusations. But on top of that, there is evidence in your own article which introduces problems with that theory:
"Police say a witness heard gunfire and then saw three people running away from the scene." With no explanation for who the third person could be, it's hard to suggest
two officers be the primary suspects.
JCady wrote:As for the second case, I think the police and medical examiner are jumping to conclusions by giving inadequate weight to the evidence that the victim was not depressed and had no reason to commit suicide. I'm accusing them of poor judgement, not a criminal coverup.
Bull and shit.
For starters, even people close to suicide victims who quite patently did express similar levels of disbelief and surprise. It's not terribly common even for people to admit they saw the signs even in retrospect. It's a very normal trait for people to want to believe the best of others and that's doubly so in the wake of a tragedy. Not to stray too far but it is a cliche to see people talking about confessed depraved serial killers and lunatic gunman in similar fashion. The old "he seemed like such a nice, normal guy" type routine and for similar reasons.
Second, that assumes that the person giving the quotes, who from the article was a co-worker (and boss at that) would be in a position of emotional intimacy. There's nothing to say they knew her emotional state so well as to absolutely rule out suicidal tendencies. If she was depressed it's entirely possible she withdrew from them with out their particularly noticing. Not at all unlikely considering the emotional roller coaster her life was, especially recently. Establishing a person's mindset at second hand is a very tricky thing and hardly something to override more objective evidence.
Thirdly, and quite probably most importantly, the evidence of murder is a third hand report on the crime scene and patently absurd potential scenario for said crime. If there was broken furniture and blood, the accounts of which are neither detailed nor directly reported, then that implies a pretty significant physical confrontation. To have attacked her and murdered her in that fashion would leave a wealth of physical evidence, of the violence done to her if nothing else, which no police officer or medical examiner would rightly miss. It's extremely difficult for some one to be beaten to death with out it being evident.
On top of that toxicology tests indicate they believe she was killed by poison, which is a down right retarded way for such a fight to have ended. There's a major brawl and they give her a bunch of pills to finally do her in? That's unlikely to say the least. Suicide, an accidental OD, or some sort of drug reaction are by far more likely that murder. If those reports come up negative, or there's no underlying medical condition, then things get murkier. But right now this looks more like a martyr complex by proxy than anything.