A Special Kind Of Evil: The Colonial Parkway Serial Killings by Blaine L. Pardoe & Victoria R. Hester

A Special Kind Of Evil: The Colonial Parkway Serial Killings by Blaine L. Pardoe & Victoria R. Hester

Author:Blaine L. Pardoe & Victoria R. Hester [Pardoe, Blaine L.]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: WildBlue Press
Published: 2017-07-11T23:00:00+00:00


At some point, the park rangers “tried to stage it. Or, they tried to put it back.”

Danny further remembers, “Their interview sheets and what they [the FBI] saw—they just buried the park rangers about them going in and out of the car. One of them even said that he felt one of the park rangers may have taken something. They were some kind of pissed. I think that even the FBI at first, they thought one or more of the park rangers were behind it.

“I’m sure the rangers and the park service don’t want to be painted as the people who were the bad people in this. I can tell you right now, in both Call-Hailey and Dowski-Thomas, their ineptness and ineptitude—I’m not saying we would have caught them if they’d left things away, but it’s almost like you had to start over each time. Especially so with Cassandra and Keith.”

Chances are the rangers innocently found the car, took some of the contents (clothing, keys, etc.) in an effort to locate or identify the owners. When they realized that both Keith and Cassandra were unaccounted for, they went back and re-staged the crime scene … never bothering to tell Mr. Call they had done that. In the process, however, they managed to contaminate the crime scene twice and leave Mr. Call wondering for the rest of his life how he could have missed the clothing in the back seat of the car.

Keith’s keys were allegedly located on the driver’s seat, and a watch and eyeglasses case were on the dashboard. On the back seat there was a man’s wallet with twelve dollars inside.

Then there was the clothing … almost all of Keith’s clothes, along with Cassandra’s top, bra, and a lone brown boot. Her purse was on the passenger side floor. One thing was missing—Cassandra’s wallet—though her checkbook was still in her purse. It was as if the wallet had been taken out of her purse. Call’s shoes, wallet, and an alligator belt were also in the back seat. Some of Cassandra’s jewelry, however, was never accounted for. The glove box was open—unlike when Mr. Call had come upon the vehicle—and the passenger side door was locked.



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