bestill
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Planting the seeds of doubt. No one ever says they raised a murderer, jmo.Watts family part deux?
Planting the seeds of doubt. No one ever says they raised a murderer, jmo.Watts family part deux?
So I’ve actually done this once. Gotten into a car I thought was my Uber. I had forgotten my ID so I U reed back to my house. I tracked the car (but didn’t check the vehicle type etc) and a guy pulled up and rolled his window down. My Uber was right behind this guy. I hopped in and started to tell him where to go. He was Spanish and didn’t speak English. I thought it was odd but I had been drinking. I was literally riding in this dudes car for about 7-10 min when my phone rings and it’s my Uber driver. He asked where I was and I said I’m in your Uber, or so I thought. He was like you’re not in my Uber. Get out now. I aggressively tapped dude on the shoulder and asked if he was an Uber and said “naw”! I screamed for him to pull over and he did immediately. I got out and my original Uber driver kept me on the phone until he reached me. I was so scared!! Anything could have happened! Looking back he was probably just some horny dude that saw a hot chick downtown and decided to “holler” at me. Then my dumbass got in his car. I won’t make that mistake again. I’m sure something similar happened with this girl but obviously it wasn’t so innocent . My friends daughter goes to school there and my own sister samantha also went there. The whole town is shook
Oh, wow, so apparently the car belongs to them, not him.His parents speak out....
Parents defend son charged in USC killing
My husband is a driver for Uber/Lyft. Together we have 5 kids, including 3 beautiful girls ages 21, 22, and 23. This story hurts my heart but PSA out of 2 years of driving, ONE person has asked for my husbands ID. Out of 2 years of driving only “1 in about 50” according to him check his license plate number.
>>>> respectfully snipped by borndem <<<<
Oh cool. His friend used his car, returning it full of blood.
Yeah, I always hate when this happens. What a stupid comment. Not surprising though.
Jmo
Pitiful that they've been put in this position. I'm sure denial is preferable to believing their son committed the crimes of kidnapping and murder...using their car and dumping the victim's body practically in their back yard.His parents speak out....
Parents defend son charged in USC killing
They are implying someone else had his car.His parents speak out....
Parents defend son charged in USC killing
His fantasy outweighed his love of his death mobile, imo.
Hopefully, he will have a lot of years to regret his decision, he had the opportunity to immediately tell her “hey, wrong car.”
I wonder if his passenger at arrest works in the area & that is why he was there in the first place, to pick her up? Next night at appx same time, he’s back again & does pick her up? Just an idea.
Oh, wow, so apparently the car belongs to them, not him.
So then if he was really passed out at a party, and someone else borrowed his car, I imagine we will be hearing about that very soon. If not, then they had better get a good lawyer!
Can't wait to hear him explain why he ran. Jmo
I noticed that guy, too—my immediate thought was that perhaps he, too, was waiting for an Uber, and peered at the car and driver to try to determine whether or not the Impala was there for him. Speaking from my own experience, I have done the same thing—I called an Uber to pick me and my partner up after a concert ended in a major city in the Northeast, and quickly discovered that all the other concert-goers had done the same! I walked up and down the street for at least 10 minutes or so, examining each one of the idling cars that had lined up outside the concert hall to see if it matched the make/model of my assigned ride (and it’s much harder than you’d think to tell a VW Jetta from a Passat, or a Hyundai Sonata from an Accent, when it’s dark and late and you’re tired—the only reason we found our Uber is because I finally connected with the driver (using his phone number, which is available through the Uber app, IIRC) and he directed us to the cross street where he was waiting. If that guy in the video had been told to look out for a Chevy Impala with a male driver (an assumption he’d likely have made, based on the driver’s first name), it might explain why he’d be staring intently at the perp’s car as it awaited its passenger.
His parents speak out....
Parents defend son charged in USC killing
if that is true, what was his explanation for not picking her up the night before? a bloody deer dove into his car and he had to extricate it and try to clean up ? I am imagining that the mystery woman in his car is a girl friend, one of the sisters, or someone who works with him in a legal or illegal capacity. maybe he told her something about the blood, even if not the truth.
What if his gf works night shift in a bar, he picks her up every night she works, lingering in the former Exxon lot until he sees her. He thought he saw her, whips his murder mobile into the HC spot & Samantha gets in, he thinks ‘easy money, I’ll drive around the block, rob her, put her out, go back & get gf’. But after pulling over to rob & put Samantha out, she starts fighting like he77, he pushes her back into the car, ultimately stabbing her to death.
She may have even found something to use as a weapon in the backseat.
Now, for this scenario to work, his gf was stranded, prob pissed off about no ride home. He then hides Samantha, maybe crashes in his car a few hours, never going home until gf is at work again. She prob called or texted & he told her he had passed out at a party, blah blah. He knew he best be there to pick her up the next night, come he77 or high water, so he risks it.
Why on earth would he think he could pick anyone up in such a public area & get away with it? IMO, he’d have to be very high or intoxicated.
However, where I am talking about is nowhere near the size of Indy, yet as we know, it could happen anywhere...