The Conservative Cave
Current Events => General Discussion => Topic started by: thundley4 on December 15, 2008, 09:38:45 PM
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ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. -- It was a meter reader who found the remains that could be Caylee Anthony. He's having a tough time and does not want to talk with the media and he is so disturbed by what he found his bosses have given him some time off of work.
When the Orange County meter reader discovered a skull in the woods not too far from Caylee Anthony's home his supervisor called 911.
That phone call makes the meter reader ineligible for a $5,000 Crimeline reward. To collect the reward, you have to call Crimeline first before you call 911.
*snip*
Bounty hunter Leonard Padilla offered a $50,000 reward for Caylee's body, but pulled the money when people complained searchers were tearing up their yards looking for remains.
*snip*
Still, Padilla plans thinks the meter reader deserves some kind of reward and he plans to write him a check if the remains belong to Caylee.
"It's going to be a figure between five and ten grand involved easily," he said. "Nobody looks at bags out here in these palmettos, they just walk by it. This guy had the foresight to go over and do it."
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Should people get rewards for finding dead bodies though? I think it should be a +1 brownie point in life. Or a get out of jail free card, but money is just crass in a situation like this.
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I would tend to agree. The money would remind me of the terrible and needless loss of an innocent life. Not much better than blood money, IMO. I wouldn't want reminders of that. Consolation enough that she's at peace now.
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My beef with the Crimeline is that they offered the reward, but reneged on a technicality. Who knows, the meter reader may feel the same way and donate the reward from the bounty hunter to something worthwhile. In the end though, it doesn't sound like he was actively searching for the remains.
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In the end though, it doesn't sound like he was actively searching for the remains.
No, but he did call the authorities. That should count for something. How many people get away with crimes because other people don't call 911?
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No, but he did call the authorities. That should count for something. How many people get away with crimes because other people don't call 911?
And WTF? He was supposed to call Crimeline before calling 911???? :mental: That's just stupid.
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No, but he did call the authorities. That should count for something. How many people get away with crimes because other people don't call 911?
Or worse, how many people get away with crimes even when someone DOES call 911? Anyone read the case of the college student who called 911, yet police couldn't be bothered to show up for nearly an hour?
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Or worse, how many people get away with crimes even when someone DOES call 911? Anyone read the case of the college student who called 911, yet police couldn't be bothered to show up for nearly an hour?
Didn't that happen here in MN?
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Wisconsin, actually--close enough.
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Wisconsin, actually--close enough.
Eh, they all sound alike. :-)
:bolt: