Post by Admin Horan on Nov 3, 2017 7:31:11 GMT -6
Also, Cary is a convicted pedophile, and he looks EXACTLY like the sketch of suspect #2. Chief said in his "confession" that he did not recognize two of the men in the truck that drove them all to Keddie. The funny thing is, there is some kind of connection between CHUCK Walke and the Seabolts, but not between them and Cary. So, it's possible that Cary was one of the men Chief didn't recognize. If, if, if there is any truth to Chief's "confession." I think there might be, because he mentions the killers using a pair of scissors, and as dmac himself pointed out, some of the stab wounds look like they were made by a scissors blade.
Chuck claims in one of the outtakes that he was taken through the cabin by a deputy, and he describes his own reaction as being awfully guilty.
Chuck and Cary have a stepsister who faked her own death (with police help?
I don't think so...) about 20 years ago. One of her female relatives disappeared and was never found. Her family own(ed) a lot of land very close to Camp 18. The Mollaths (owners of the land the Keddie Resort is on) would have been close to them, and Gary Mollath is the prime suspect in the very similar murder of his own sister a couple of years before Cabin 28. She may have "known too much" about what was going on. Gary makes a pretty good suspect in the murder of another young woman in Butte County. And so on.
The problem with Cabin 28 is not a "lack" of suspects. It's a surplus of suspects.
Chuck claims in one of the outtakes that he was taken through the cabin by a deputy, and he describes his own reaction as being awfully guilty.
Chuck and Cary have a stepsister who faked her own death (with police help?
I don't think so...) about 20 years ago. One of her female relatives disappeared and was never found. Her family own(ed) a lot of land very close to Camp 18. The Mollaths (owners of the land the Keddie Resort is on) would have been close to them, and Gary Mollath is the prime suspect in the very similar murder of his own sister a couple of years before Cabin 28. She may have "known too much" about what was going on. Gary makes a pretty good suspect in the murder of another young woman in Butte County. And so on. The problem with Cabin 28 is not a "lack" of suspects. It's a surplus of suspects.

