Posed, which I believe is what this scene is, that is for the offender’s gratification.” Kegan Kline So you try to make it look like there’s an accident. “If a perpetrator staged the scene, they did that for their benefit. “There is a difference between a scene that is staged and a scene that is posed,” McCollum said. The victims, according to the warrant, didn’t have any defense wounds, but some articles of clothing were taken from them and removed from the scene, while the killer placed the victims’ bodies in what investigators called a staged manner.ĭirector of Atlanta’s Cold Case Research Institute and Atlanta metro-area CSI, Sheryl McCollum, said she believes the killer likely “posed” the victims’ bodies, instead of staging, for a form of gratification. You’re not necessarily going to get that so much with a blunt type of weapon,” Morgan said. “Because of the nature of the victim’s wounds, it is nearly certain the perpetrator of the crime would have gotten blood on his person/clothing.”Īlthough the exact murder weapon is redacted in the warrant, “Body Bags” host and forensics expert Joseph Scott Morgan told Grace that the killer likely used an edged weapon, given the amount of blood found at the crime scene. “A large amount of blood was lost by the victims at the crime scene,” an agent wrote in the warrant. Investigators have been mostly mum on many case details but a redacted warrant provides a glimpse into information surrounding the murder scene, suspect, and victims. Investigators think the bodies of slain Delphi girls, Abby Williams and Libby German, were staged and moved at the crime scene, court documents obtained by The Murder Sheet podcast revealed the show’s founders joined Nancy Grace and her expert guests on Wednesday’s “Crime Stories” to discuss the case.Īs CrimeOnline previously reported, 13-year-old Abby and 14-year-old Libby were murdered in 2017, but the killer remains elusive.
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