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   alt.fan.art-bell      The adorable whackjob Art Bell      96,349 messages   

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   Message 94,549 of 96,349   
   Woody to All   
   West Mesa murder mystery gets renewed na   
   25 Dec 16 13:29:28   
   
   XPost: nm.forsale, alt.killers.serial, alt.astrology.marketplace   
   XPost: alt.paranormal   
   From: woody@lobos.com   
      
   Edmond Wollmann is a noted serial abuser, in particular of   
   vulnerable women.  He is from New Mexico.   
      
   ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) – Almost eight years after the first   
   bone was found, the killer still has not been found in the West   
   Mesa murders. As the unsolved murder mystery gets renewed   
   national attention, theories are emerging again that somewhere   
   out there, a second burial site may exist.   
      
   Eleven victims were discovered in that mass burial site on the   
   West Mesa, but eight women are still missing, possible victims   
   of the killer feared dead, and science may be the solution to   
   finding out where.   
      
   The tract of land on 118th and Amole Mesa Southwest is just   
   desert. Homes won’t go up there anytime soon for a big reason.   
      
   “We are on the West Mesa burial site,” noted Christine Barber.   
   She is executive director of Street Safe New Mexico, a nonprofit   
   organization that helps women struggling with drugs and turning   
   tricks on Albuquerque streets, just like ten of the eleven West   
   Mesa victims.   
      
   “This isn’t anything that’s talked about anymore. However, these   
   women are still missing,” Barber said, holding a poster of the   
   women who vanished amid similar circumstances.   
      
   Andy Jochems, a field geologist with the New Mexico Bureau of   
   Geology and Mineral Resources, told KRQE News 13, “I believe   
   that there is another burial site somewhere.”   
      
   Jochems and Barber started analyzing aerial images near the   
   burial site, noting changes in soil moisture and color.   
   Something stood out about half a mile from the makeshift grave   
   site.   
      
   “We settled on ground penetrating radar,” Jochems said.   
      
   All signs pointed to digging in that suspicious area, and there   
   was nothing natural about it.   
      
   “What was interesting was that the location had these two   
   indentations that looked really artificial. They didn’t look   
   like they were made by any natural processes, like runoff from   
   strong thunderstorms in the summer, or wind blowing sand,”   
   Jochems said. “They looked like they were definitely man-made   
   and not a natural geologic process,” he explained on scene this   
   week.   
      
   The West Mesa case this month got new attention on A&E’s “The   
   Killing Season.” During the program, Jochems’ equipment shot   
   radar waves into the ground. The imagery was telling.   
      
   “There was some disturbance within the upper six feet of   
   sediment and soil, so it had been definitely been dug,” he said.   
      
   Perhaps was it a pre-dug grave a murder victim never made it to.   
   “I think that’s definitely a possibility in this case,” he noted.   
      
   Five years after the first bone was unearthed, a KRQE News 13   
   Special Assignment report shed light on the suspect list,   
   including Lorenzo Montoya, a frequent john with a violent   
   history toward women who met his fate by a pimp’s bullet.   
      
   Joseph Blea, a notorious rapist, also was revealed as a possible   
   of suspect. He’s now serving 36 years of hard time in state   
   prison. But to this day, there have been hundreds of tips, but   
   zero arrests.   
      
   “I don’t actually believe there is a suspect still around,”   
   Barber revealed this week.   
      
   She believes, “It’s statistically unlikely for a serial killer   
   to stop killing, and so it is more likely that either he is   
   arrested or he is dead.”   
      
   And if there is another final resting place for the missing   
   eight, Jochems said, “I think finding the second site is really   
   the hardest part.”   
      
   Jochems and Barber realize they’re not homicide investigators,   
   but they hope their detective work helps this cold case warm up.   
      
   APD has no new information to release on this case, but the   
   department is following any new leads that come in.   
      
   http://krqe.com/2016/12/14/west-mesa-murder-mystery-gets-renewed-   
   national-attention/   
       
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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