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Framed With Google Maps

Autor Lynne Blanchard
en Paperback – 5 oct 2015
Nancy Cooper, a wife and mother of two young daughters left her home to go jogging and was later found murdered. The tragedy was compounded when a bungled investigation followed. This book outlines how the State railroaded a man with no evidence. Investigators were influenced by neighborhood gossip instead of objectively looking at the facts. Investigators fabricated evidence to support their theory.Investigators ignored alternate suspects, even those who had been intimately involved with the victim. Investigators destroyed the victim's cell phone and wiped all of the data. Witness statements evolved as they were molded to fit the theory. Witnesses who reported seeing the victim were ignored. Investigators updated their narratives to fit their theory. Tire tracks and foot prints at the scene were not cast for identification. Prosecutors hid behind national security to circumvent discovery rules. Prosecutors withheld evidence long enough for digital deadlines to expire. No evidence linked the suspect to the crime. It is indisputable that evidence was planted on the suspect's computer. The judge blocked the defense case by forbidding their experts to testify. It is the author's intent to expose the misconduct by presenting the facts about this tragic case. The information included in this book is documented with references to police reports and court transcripts.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780692490389
ISBN-10: 0692490388
Pagini: 322
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Lynne Blanchard

Notă biografică

Lynne Blanchard resides in Raleigh, North Carolina, with her husband and two sons. She graduated from Kent State University with a Bachelor of Science degree in Chemistry with a specialization in coatings and polymers. She worked in the coatings industry in several roles at various fortune five-hundred companies before advancing into a regional sales manager position with Southern Clay Products. She left the work force in 2003 to stay home with her children and has plans to continue her work as an advocate for the wrongfully convicted.