![]() … To be honest, my mind isn’t so much on that as it is on looking at this and thinking about what was going through the girls’ minds right then. That bridge isn’t something you can just stumble onto. “That they think it’s probably somebody from Delphi?” Lang asked. This trip, Lang said she flew from her home in Toronto to Indianapolis on Sunday to be there for a news conference announced Friday afternoon. Lang said she met Libby’s mom after reaching out during the investigation - “One mom to other mom,” she said. Meghan Lang, a friend of Carrie Timmons, Libby’s mother, studied the video playing in a loop on a wall at the Canal Center as police packed up their gear. (Police did not provide details about make, model, year or other details about the vehicle.) That would be near an entrance to the trail. 13, 2017, on Carroll County Road 300 North. Police also said they were looking for information about a vehicle found abandoned on Feb. ![]() Indiana State Police’s new evidence built off what was on Libby’s phone: Some additional audio - now saying, “Guys, down the hill” - and video of the man picking his way across the rail trestle. Their bodies were discovered about a half-mile up Deer Creek from the abandoned Monon High Bridge rail trestle.ĭays after the girls were killed, Libby was being hailed as a hero for having the presence of mind to capture footage of a man approaching on the Monon High Bridge and then keeping the app open at least long enough to record the suspect’s voice, saying, “Down the hill.” The search parties went out that night and again the next day when they didn’t return. Abby and Libby went there that Monday afternoon - it was a day off school - to hike for a few hours. But it’s more of a Delphi place than it is a regional draw. The trail is a popular one on Delphi’s expansive trail system, leading to an abandoned railroad trestle that was supposed to be closed to hikers. 13, 2017, was the other side of the Monon High Bridge trail, just northeast of Delphi. He had to know his way around Delphi to get out there.” “I’m not sure he could have got where he was going, to do what he did, otherwise. “Seems like he’d have to be - or at least have been around here a lot,” Tinney said. Tinney spoke what seemed to be accepted truth, no matter how disconcerting. Robert Tinney, Houser’s neighbor, looked over a sheet handed to him by a state trooper, showing the suspect’s fresh composite and other details. “I’m not sure what to think,” Houser said. Houser trailed off at the back of the room, surrounded by news crews from television stations from across Indiana doing live shots at the end of noon newscasts. “I’m not sure it should have, but it surprised me when (Carter) said that - that (the suspect) was from Delphi,” said Janice Houser of Delphi. What Carter said rattled the room on the north side of the town of 2,877, about 17 miles northeast of Lafayette. ![]() ![]() A question to you: What will those closest to you think of when they find out that you brutally murdered two little girls?” We know that this is about power to you, and you want to know what we know. Carter kept speaking directly to the killer, whether he was there in a standing-room-only crowd that lined up to get in to witness the announcement or not: “We likely have interviewed you or someone close to you. ![]()
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