Post by socalmick on Mar 14, 2018 23:28:20 GMT
Hello, everyone. I'm new to this board and only recently became aware of earonsgsk. Needless to say it's consuming my free time but I'm finding there are some advantages to being the new guy, mainly not being hung up on information that’s been disproved or POIs that have been cleared. I spent many hours reading this board before I decided to register and get involved. Now I’m at the point now where my curiosity lands me at blocked pages. I understand the reason for that and I’ll earn my access to those pages, however, I do have a few questions I’d like to ask which can help me leverage your expertise while saving loads of time.
1. Is there evidence at any of the crime scenes that someone had tampered with the exterior phone lines or infrastructure? I’m not talking about cutting lines or attempting to cut lines as in attack #1. I’m talking about splicing into a phone line the way tv cable used to be spliced among neighbors. If no evidence existed, was it non-destructive to disconnect the phone line leading into the house? E.g., remove a coaxial and route it through an intermediary, then back into the original port? I grew up in the 1990s so while answering machines and caller id (via *69) were coming into play at that point, I’m unsure about status quo technology in the late 1970s.
2. Is more credibility given to physical descriptions of the attacker provided by the older victims? I’d bet my last dime that a 30 year old women would have more sexual experience than the average 16, 19, or 21 year old. So in my mind, when it comes to age gauging an unidentified man raping her (regardless of how big his penis was), the older victims may be more qualified to estimate age. This is just an assumption though so please correct me if my assumptions are incorrect. Same theory applies to those victims who escaped attack, especially attack #3.
3. Were links ever established showing that the attacker wore stolen clothes to later attacks? Were clothes worn by the attacker found abandoned in the area? Seems like a huge wardrobe for someone that’s regularly moving around, not to mention the cost of at least 30 different outfits in two years. If someone stole three shirts and two sets of pants from me but did little else inside the house, it would be difficult for me to determine they were even missing much less stolen. Even if I came home to an unloaded gun and called the cops, I’m not going through the closet to check if items are missing in there.
4. Is it possible the attacker stole cars from in the in the middle of the night and returned them by morning? Cars made before the mid 1990s weren’t difficult to get into and start. That would explain the Chevy Vega sightings and the poi who owned a green Vega. Would also explain many theories about the vehicle.
5. Does ballistic evidence still exist for any of the gunshot murders? That could be a definitive link that doesn’t involve dna.
6. Are there descriptions of bikes ridden by the attacker that were not stolen? I ask because if the attacker brought their own bike, that could narrow things down quite a bit. If it's a road race bike, that leads me in a completely different direction than a bmx bike.
Thanks for any time you spend on these questions. I’ll certainly have more.
As for who I am. I’d prefer not to use my real name if that’s okay because this case scares the hell out of me and I live within 45 minutes of Dana Point and Irvine. My friends and family call me Mick, please do the same, but know that's a nickname. I didn’t grow up in California, I came to paradise on orders from the Marine Corps and never left. I grew up playing football and running track but once those activities stopped after high school, I got into endurance sports, specifically cycling (road races). I floundered with real estate appraising for a few years before the market showed early signs of collapse in 2006-2007, at which point I enlisted. I am no longer in the military, I work in the entertainment industry. All this combined made me take a serious interest in this case.