>>>If 20/20 had actually done any research they'd have known no such police report involving Jim and stalking exists and, one presumes, told this to the audience.<<<<< From the Time article (post #42): "Other reporters and Van de Velde's lawyers have found one complaint, filed last Sept. 16 in nearby Branford. In it, a reporter said she had received several hang-up calls and suspected Van de Velde because he had sent her two letters at work expressing interest in a relationship."
I suppose one could argue that this is not really a "stalker" complaint, but an air of uncertainty still surrounds Jim and this case. In reality there is not a whole lot that would eliminate Jim as a suspect- he fit's the profile to,arguably,some degree. There's the stalker issues, his description by some as being wound too tight, and the job crisis over which he sought professional help. There's the relationship with Suzanne that had her very upset and the fact that he has no alibi for evening of the killing. Not enough to convict him, but with the lack of evidence leading the case elsewhere, not enough to completely rule him out. **************************************
Playing devil's advocate and presenting the evidence as I believe the police might view it... It, unfortunately,is the most likely scenario, I believe, given the evidence we have been presented.
Suzanne arrives at her apartment at about 8:30 after dropping the borrowed car at the campus parking lot. Between 8:30 to 8:50 a group of friends ask her to go to the movies, she tells them she is going to work that evening, they assume that means on her thesis. And from 9:02 'til 9:10 she is on-line, e-mailing a friend about leaving books in the apt. house lobby.
Jim has last seen Suzanne between 4-4:30 that afternoon when she drops off her thesis, leaving a note requesting an e-mail if Jim has any concerns. At 6PM Anna Ramirez drops by Jim's office to ask him if he wants to go see a movie. Jim replies that he will spend the evening working, and spends that time reviewing Suzanne's thesis. Jim says that at some point he briefly goes over to the hockey game, a short distance from his office, and ends up at home between 8-8:30.
Could a meeting have been arrainged between Suzanne and Jim for a time later that evening? We have a conflux of the time element at either the 4-4:30 drop off time of the thesis, at which point a 8:30 call to Suzanne could have been promised, or the, perhaps, coincidental 8:30 arrival of Suzanne and Jim at their respective residences, where a call from either would have found the other home to take the call.
Would this have been unusual? Given the note by Suzanne requesting contact if Jim had any problems, and the fact that both had either been reviewing the thesis or about to work on it, it doesn't seem a far fetched proposition. A probable occurrence?
At this point Suzanne leaves her apartment to return the keys and to meet with Jim. She is seen at 9:15 by Peter Stein, to whom she relates that she is returning the car keys and is very tired. Peter also states that Suzanne is carring some 8 1/2 by 11 "papers". This I suspect would most likely be part of the thesis, a revision or addition, that she is bringing to the meeting with Jim.
She returns the keys and is last seen walking north on College St.(so. of Elm) by the "mystery" witness at approx. 9:25 to 9:30. Suzanne is next seen at 9:58 at the corner of Edge Hill and East Rock about 1.8 miles away.
The question, not assuming the presupposed meeting with Jim, is where is she going? Drawing a line between College & Elm and the murder scene there is really only 3 places that make any sense from the evidence we have: the hockey game at Prospect and Sachem, Jim's office at about the same spot, or Jim's home at StRonan and (approx.) Canner.
The hockey game would not be very likely, Suzanne passed on a chance to go to the movies earlier and had told friends she would be working at what they assumed was her thesis. That leaves either Jim's office or his apartment.
The problem then exists as to how she got to the crime scene 1.8 miles away. It might have been possible to walk that entire distance but very likely? What has always occurred to me is that perhaps Suzanne was the type of person who like to "walk and talk" things over. To some, under stress, a long walk and discussion is a kind of therapy. But 1.8 miles? It's possble if the other person was somewhat of a "walker",too. We saw Jim in the 20/20 piece walking quite briskly and bicycling through New Haven.And Suzanne? We have this from an article written by her sister Ellen:(post 211) "She had a distinctive walk-fast, lively and purposeful-and the spirit of an explorer. During a September 1998 visit, she and her boyfriend, Roman, and I covered miles of Manhattan on foot."
It's possible,too, that the peception of walking distances by a student who walks a great deal to class might have made the distance seem that much shorter. Or Suzaane could have met Jim at his office, driven to his apartment, and then walked and talked the remaing .5 miles from Jim's apartment on St Ronan to the crime scene. One doesn't realize until viewing the map that St Ronan becomes Edge Hill, the same street as the murder scene.
My feeling is that an argument ensued, as was heard by local residents, with Suzanne saying she "can't believe you're doing this," and then as she walked towards one of the neighborhood homes, she was struck from behind on top of the head and is rendered unconscious.She is then cut numerous times about the shoulders, with the final blow to the throat. Being unconscious would slow the heart and respiration rate, which might help explain the lack of a great deal of blood.Also, with the final cut to the neck being underneath her, much of the blood might have been hidden by her body. |