I just wanted to reiterate this point in case anyone missed it:
That does NOT sound like normal police behavior at all. WTF is going on with that?
Also, similar allegations have been leveled at Dutch authorities at the highest levels of power:
Quote: (01-22-2016 08:24 PM)thoughtgypsy Wrote:
Perhaps most notably, the police search of Dutroux's house on 13 December 1995 and again six days later in relation to his car theft charge, came under harshest scrutiny.[9] During this time, Julie Lejeune and Mélissa Russo were still alive in the basement dungeon, but the police failed to discover them. Since the search was unrelated to kidnapping charges, police searching the house had no dogs or specialised equipment that might have discovered the girls' presence, and in an otherwise decrepit and dirty basement they failed to recognize the significance of the freshly plastered and painted wall that concealed the dungeon. While in the basement, a locksmith who was accompanying the police said he clearly heard children's cries coming from inside the house, but was overruled by the police, who concluded the cries must have come from the street outside.[9] Which is especially remarkable since the country was at that time in the midst of a nationwide search for missing children.
That does NOT sound like normal police behavior at all. WTF is going on with that?
Also, similar allegations have been leveled at Dutch authorities at the highest levels of power: