I listened to that podcast as well, and I walked away feeling completely different about the case than when I first start started. It is a great listen!Just listened to a Casefile podcast about Lunas murder, very interesting and worth a listen if you're not too familiar.
I'm not convinced his death was a suicide, but I'm not convinced it was murder either. Especially after listening to the podcast. I could still go either way.The strong suspicion, and the FBI theory, was that it was self inflicted.
I'm not convinced his death was a suicide, but I'm not convinced it was murder either. Especially after listening to the podcast. I could still go either way.
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I said self-inflicted, not suicide. In this case, there may be a major difference.
I have not heard the podcast.
I wonder how it could be self-inflicted, but not suicide.
I believe it may have been me. I did FOIA request to FBI in 2012. Appealed in 2013. I won. I could see taking more time to trickle down to other agencies.Thanks. It could be someone aligned with Brown, or it could be a Luna researcher; there are a few out there.
That it wasn't suicideChinacat67, what is your opinion?
Here is a link to the podcast. 3 coroners said it was murder. I wonder why there isn't more cold case pleas for justice in the media?
http://casefilepodcast.com/case-09-jonathan-luna/
There is evidence, the toll ticket with his blood. Why would he get a ticket when he had an easy pass? Someone drove him in his car transferring blood into the ticket.
Here is a link to the podcast. 3 coroners said it was murder. I wonder why there isn't more cold case pleas for justice in the media?
http://casefilepodcast.com/case-09-jonathan-luna/
Were any of them pathologists? Remember in Pennsylvania the coroner is an elected position. There are tow truck drivers, housewives, and dishwashers who have absolutely no training that are coroners in Pennsylvania. Their basic duty is to show up and say, "yep he's dead" and have the body shipped either to a funeral home or to the state facility for an autopsy.
The coroner in Lancaster County in 2003 was Dr. Barry Walp, he was a retired osteopathic physician.
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