butters
High on a Hill
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2009
- Posts
- 84,451
they saw a well. they looked in the well. found nothing... but it wasn't on the right damned property.
now they're looking back into it after woman made enough fuss they actually took cadaver dogs out to the RIGHT place and the dogs indicated multiple sites. They're now thinking bones are likely to be found over a massive area. 2007... damn. The woman told them and told them, her father killed dozens of women (sex workers) and made them help him dispose of the bodies. She told them WHILE HE WAS STILL ALIVE. Another sibling says there's no way her father could be a murderer. *sigh* Guess when all those bones start getting recovered she may change her mind. What a shit show. 15 years.
now they're looking back into it after woman made enough fuss they actually took cadaver dogs out to the RIGHT place and the dogs indicated multiple sites. They're now thinking bones are likely to be found over a massive area. 2007... damn. The woman told them and told them, her father killed dozens of women (sex workers) and made them help him dispose of the bodies. She told them WHILE HE WAS STILL ALIVE. Another sibling says there's no way her father could be a murderer. *sigh* Guess when all those bones start getting recovered she may change her mind. What a shit show. 15 years.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crim...sedgntp&cvid=82617b18af1f44f2b3e6a07a042d256cAccording to WHO-TV, the Fremont County Sheriff's Office said Lucy Studey reached out to them 15 years ago, urging them to recover the bodies of up to 70 women who she says were murdered by her now-deceased father, Donald Dean Studey.
Donald died in 2013 at the age of 75.
"We have heard about this for years," Deputy Sheriff Tim Bothwell told the station Wednesday.
"She [Lucy] told us in 2007 and we went out and there was only one well on the property that we could see, we didn't realize that it was on other people's property," Bothwell said.