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jberryhill

(62,444 posts)
2. Well
Thu Apr 26, 2018, 08:11 AM
Apr 2018

As far as the commentary on the characters of the persons involved, I'm an agnostic. It's a tragic situation. I'm sure they were all nice folks, and nice folks can do nutty things when torn by emotional attachments. They all seemed well-liked by people who knew them. My wife found the hagiography around Chapman kind of off-putting, but it's understandable in the circumstances. Quite obviously, she had taken up with a married man while married herself. That's generally frowned upon, but not extremely unusual behavior. But, hey, mow your lawn, clean up after your dog, pay your taxes, and you are jake with me, whatever your private jollies might be about which don't involve me.

The lot of them were successful in communication and marketing, so no doubt they were all good at being charming.

I've known and voted for Sokola for years, so, yeah, Pike Creek Christian School... Republican politician... umm... no on the politics.

It must have been a real whirlwind thing. Chapman had been married for quite a while to Luke, and the Gerardot's only showed up a few months ago really.

And, yeah, Luke... what a mess. He did release a kind and appropriate statement. The other innocent victims are the two golden retrievers.

But back to "just the facts, ma'am"....

Driving in the big city:

You don't have to go through Philly to get to Radnor. You can do it old school and take 202 to 1, or go up 95 to the Blue Route. I rode Septa to Philly for years, and making a Wilmington - 30th Street - Radnor connection strikes me as a lot more bewildering to someone new to the area than "Siri, get my ass to Radnor". She would also have had to have checked out that Lowry Lane is conveniently walkable from the closest Septa Regional Rail station (or the Norristown high speed line).

I'm thinking that taking the train avoids the problem of leaving a car in Radnor, since she could take his car home.

I doubt she could have known whether they'd be there on her arrival, so maybe the disguise was to delay identification as she was walking down the street to the house on the off chance they'd see her and have time to react.

"Maybe he was ignoring his wife's texts, but then checked his texts at the restaurant to see if Chapman had sent him any in explanation of her not being there. In the initial articles, I thought he called the police when he got there."

I've seen some that are unclear on who called the police, some that say the neighbors did, and some that suggest he did. That fact seems all over the map. One might think the neighbors, if they thought they heard a gunshot (other than the widely quoted one who wasn't sure), would have also been curious about the stranger that showed up and was hanging out in the driveway. I can go on an extended rant about the people who write news copy these days, whom I am hesitant to call "reporters"....

"If I were him and showed up at a place I thought my wife just killed my girlfriend, I wouldn't go inside either."

I suppose so. If I had any concern for the life or safety of someone inside, it would take a certain level of calculation to consider that it might not be in my best interest to be found inside or to have been inside.

Recall one of the attempted framings of the scene by Capano - at one point the notion was floated that the other woman, the one who bought the gun, showed up at the Capano residence with the gun, and that the fatal shot was fired in a struggle to get the gun away from her. I like to irritate my wife by going on about how Tom Capano valiantly tried to save Ms. Fahey from her, and then simply panicked in the aftermath.

Here's one for you - what's with the dresser on the curb and the mattress on the enclosed porch? She had just moved in, so it's not as if these items were on their way out. Had they been dropped off, and he was coming over to help her get them inside, since she was slightly built and might not have had a good way to move them on her own?

He just kind of floats onto the scene from being "in the area" to being "at the house" right between the shooting(s) and the police showing up. On the subject of "I wouldn't go into the house", then if you had been expecting to meet Chapman for dinner, and at that time became aware of Jennair's plan, would you go to the house at all without calling police first, to establish that you certainly weren't there?

Or how about this? When, exactly, did he quit his job, what's he been doing since then, and what was his planned next step? One of the things that Mark didn't have to face is returning to his colleagues at Udel. That would be awkward. I still haven't checked Emily Post on the subject of "when your wife shoots your mistress and kills herself, which funeral, if any, do you attend?"

Was he actively searching for other work? Or did this thing sort of blow up already, and he had quit the Udel job to avoid being "that guy" at the Udel communications office?

Oh well, absent further information on how this went down, I'll go back to my regular Delaware True Crime hobby of pondering whateverthefuck happened to Jack Wheeler in his weird odyssey, and how did his body end up at the Newark Pathmark.

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