PaulDaleRoberts
Number of posts : 1790 Registration date : 2009-05-17
| Subject: Emailing the Tip Line Wed Jan 04, 2023 6:26 am | |
| Emailing the Tip Line Paul Dale Roberts, HPI's Esoteric Detective Halo Paranormal Investigations www.cryptic916.com/Email: jazmaonline@gmail.comSacramento Paranormal Haunted Hotline: 916 203 7503 I think everyone in the nation has heard about Bryan Kohberger, the monster that is being charged for the connection of the fatal Nov. 13, 2002, stabbings of University of Idaho students Kaylee Goncalves, Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle and Madison Mogen, during the early morning hours in Moscow, Idaho. When I first heard about this crime, I was in shock. When time went by and there were no arrests, I became very frustrated. In one of the articles, I noticed that there was an email tip line. I wrote that email down. I really wanted this monster to be caught. In another article it was said that the victim had defensive wounds. That victim was Kaylee Goncalves. If Kaylee had defensive wounds, she most likely has the killer's DNA on the inside of her fingernails. Kaylee even mentioned to one of her friends, that she thought she had a stalker. In another article I read, the police thought the killer was targeting these 4 victims, or just one of the victims. I didn't believe that this was a targeted act. I thought immediately that we are dealing with a serial killer and that if he could kill 4 people in one night, he will do it again. I believed the killer was very methodical in his planning. Weeks went by and still no one had been arrested, so I decided to pull out that tipster email and wrote that this killer needs to be caught as soon as possible, because he is going to do it again. I stated that he is an aspiring serial killer and the attack on the 4 students was not a targeted attack. I have an Associate's Degree in Criminology and I usually gravitate towards unsolved crimes. I also mentioned in my tipster email that the DNA that they gather from Kaylee's fingernails needs to be entered into a genealogy data base like 23 and Me or Ancestor.com There are so many people that have submitted their DNA to these databases and jump on the bandwagon that their privacy is being intruded upon. If you have submitted your DNA to one of these databases, you have opened yourself up for research by any government agency that needs to tap into these databases to catch a criminal. If you are not a criminal, why the fuss? By utilizing a genealogy database to catch Bryan Kohberger, lives were saved. Bryan would have killed more people. After I sent my email out to the tipster email, I also copied the FBI. Yes, the FBI also were sent my "tip". I then did screen shots of my emails to the tip line and FBI and downloaded it to the Internet Archive. Another factor I added in my tipster email is that I thought the killer had a law enforcement background. I was correct, he majored in Criminology and with his intelligence, he would have become a professor in Criminology. Unfortunately, Bryan decided to take a different path. The path towards evil. I am sure that other people came up with this idea and may have sent in tips that were similar to mine. When no one knew who the Golden State Killer was, I again sent an email to the FBI and told them if they had the DNA of the Golden State Killer, that they should put it in a genealogy database. Of course, a gentleman and former law enforcement official named Paul Holes had the very same idea and was credited for identifying the Golden State Killer. With this article, I am not trying to get credit for identifying the Idaho University Killer, but I am thrilled that law enforcement is utilizing genealogy databases to catch these monsters! I salute law enforcement for their dedication in solving these grisly murders. | |
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