Post by Deleted on Jun 13, 2015 21:57:35 GMT
Back on track again, his most recent post:
www.thequesterfiles.com/html/update_--_the_case_of_the_ear_.html
June 9, 2015
Sacramento is in the grips of a wind and heat wave. Cloudy out, humid, moody. Sinister undercurrents, as the aesthetics would say. But it is time to accentuate the positive. I’ve tried to raise Ventura but received again no call back. Since I ask “Can you let me know if it is negative so I know it is time to move on?” a couple of friends (retired fuzz) said it still sounds positive. This can become an elaborate search, especially with what I have presented and the fact that this website has introduced so much into the equation (and is accessed by several jurisdictions for information). The Torrey Pines murder (1984) was brought to my attention, and there is much San Diego did when interest was renewed that most did not hear about for a long time. Consider the difference in a vast crime spree like this. EAR’s reputation as a super-villain is still only growing.
I have been told I have become a negative optimist instead of my usual overly optimistic pessimist. So I’m going to give lots of leeway and continue my own investigation. If it is pertinent, then I will pass it on. But it won’t hurt now to throw some horseshoes and hand grenades. I am especially intrigued by the map EAR left behind in Danville. Most everything about it says back east, especially Florida around the wrecking centers of Orlando. Also, EAR seems to have worked under the auspices of a family enterprise, but oversight may not have been parental but an older cousin . . . it is time to get more detailed about an obscure life long ago that, on the surface, seemed a normal life.
For those still searching for the map’s real life location (if it does exist), remember the cul de sacs had little islands in them and the lake was close to a half clover highway intersection. Connecting EAR to the real location may be as good as DNA or it may serve as the impetus to finally overcome any obstacles to securing familial DNA.
Pabulum, overly-marinated in ego