Sauniere
02-13-2006, 11:16 PM
No! This is NOT about Bush... :rolleyes:
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/11298988/site/newsweek/
-snip-
Feb. 20, 2006 issue - It's a lesson taught at every police academy (and by common sense): if someone flees a crime scene, there's reason to be suspicious. And if the person hops a flight to London, leaving behind his murdered wife and daughter, and skipping their funeral, the case shouldn't require Sherlock Holmes. And so there was a sense of relief last week when London police arrested Neil Entwistle, 27, who will be extradited to the United States to face charges of killing his wife, Rachel, 27, and 9-month-old daughter, Lillian, in Hopkinton, Mass., on Jan. 20.
The case had, to say the least, gotten off to a rocky start. Despite repeated searches of the Entwistle home by family, neighbors and police, the bodies went undiscovered for several days, hidden under a pile of comforters in the master bedroom. The resulting uncertainty over the time of deaths led prosecutors to admit early on that they couldn't even tell if Entwistle was in the country at the time of the killings. Although prosecutors immediately called the husband a "person of interest," they also explored other angles, including whether the killings could be related to the couple's use of eBay, the online marketplace where they'd sold software but recently stopped making deliveries—leaving buyers complaining of being scammed...
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/11298988/site/newsweek/
-snip-
Feb. 20, 2006 issue - It's a lesson taught at every police academy (and by common sense): if someone flees a crime scene, there's reason to be suspicious. And if the person hops a flight to London, leaving behind his murdered wife and daughter, and skipping their funeral, the case shouldn't require Sherlock Holmes. And so there was a sense of relief last week when London police arrested Neil Entwistle, 27, who will be extradited to the United States to face charges of killing his wife, Rachel, 27, and 9-month-old daughter, Lillian, in Hopkinton, Mass., on Jan. 20.
The case had, to say the least, gotten off to a rocky start. Despite repeated searches of the Entwistle home by family, neighbors and police, the bodies went undiscovered for several days, hidden under a pile of comforters in the master bedroom. The resulting uncertainty over the time of deaths led prosecutors to admit early on that they couldn't even tell if Entwistle was in the country at the time of the killings. Although prosecutors immediately called the husband a "person of interest," they also explored other angles, including whether the killings could be related to the couple's use of eBay, the online marketplace where they'd sold software but recently stopped making deliveries—leaving buyers complaining of being scammed...