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Post by Admin Horan on Nov 7, 2017 10:47:46 GMT -6
That whole portion of Plumas and Butte counties is primarily logging country. BUT--and this is perhaps an important clue--it's also a pretty popular destination for hikers, campers, cross-country skiers, etc. And one person has claimed that Cary Walke and a regular visitor were responsible for Tina's disappearance. The funny thing, is, there is no way for this person to have known that Cary should have been known as a suspect in the first place. That is, this person is the one who tipped us to Cary Walke. No one else even seems to have known that Chuck has a brother named Cary. There is no doubt that this friend of Cary's was/is an avid outdoorsman who loves spending time in that exact area.
Now, keep in mind--there is no EVIDENCE that Tina was actually murdered, or that she died that weekend. But if she were murdered by some kind of pedohile predator, leaving her body out in the open at that location is very, very typical of the offender who plans to VISIT THE VICTIM again and again. In such cases, the location is never chosen "randomly." It's a place that already has an emotional connection, usually going back to childhood. Who would have even known about Camp 18 in those days? It's pretty remote, even by National Forest standards. Well, the Boy Scouts had a permanent camp of their own within hiking distance of Camp 18...and Cary's mother married into a family that own(ed) a lot of the timber land just north and west of Camp 18.
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