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|    Message 27,411 of 28,028    |
|    It Takes A Village to All    |
|    Who killed wigger Christa Worthington? (    |
|    25 Nov 17 11:42:16    |
      XPost: alt.atheism, ny.general, alt.politics.nationalism.black       XPost: alt.society.liberalism       From: retard@hillaryclinton.com              Another white woman meets death after screwing blacks.              During the winter of 2002, the quiet Cape Cod community of Truro       was rocked, when a former New York City fashion writer was found       murdered inside her home. As correspondent Susan Spencer       reports, almost everyone in the town became a suspect, when       police decided to take a look at the entire male population.              In the wintertime, Cape Cod can feel like the end of the world       and it's the only world 56-year-old fishing warden Tony Jackett       ever really has known.              "It's a real challenge being out on the water, you       know...mentally and physically...really. A real independent way       of life," he says. "I feel fortunate and blessed that I was born       and raised here."              And that, according to reporter Eric Williams, is pretty much       how everybody in the town of Truro saw him. "He's a great guy.       Gregarious, smart, ah, you know, really a pleasant fellow, you       know, who likes the ladies, the ladies you know!" Williams says.              In 1997, a new lady came to town - a glamorous former fashion       writer from New York named Christa Worthington.              And Tony Jackett, married, with six kids, nonetheless went for       her, hook, line and sinker. "She was someone very different from       the people that I knew," Jackett remembers. "She was mysterious,       enigmatic, somewhat of a loner."              Worthington, a 40-year-old Vassar grad, had lived what seemed a       life in the fast lane, covering the runways of New York, London       and Paris for top fashion magazines, scoring an interview with       fashion superstar Yves St. Laurent when she was just 26 years       old.              But Steve Radlauer, who dated Christa for two years in New York,       says she never felt part of the glamorous world she covered.              In 1997, she moved to Truro, where her prominent New England       family owned a slew of properties.              It seemed like the perfect retreat, and the perfect place to       have a child. "She had this having a baby thing in mind, and I       think she felt like this would be a good place to do that," says       Radlauer. "The complication was that she was not married and       didn't have a boyfriend."              "I could tell that there was an attraction. You know ultimately       I ended up over her house having a cup of tea...and one thing       leads to another," Jackett remembers,              For about a year, off and on, they had an affair and for the       beautiful writer, who desperately wanted a child - and the local       fisherman who already had six, one thing did lead to another.              Jackett says Christa's pregnancy came as a total surprise.              It was surprise he didn't share with his wife of 26 years, even       when Christa gave birth to a daughter, Ava, in May 1999.              Friends insist Christa had been told she couldn't have a baby,       but Jackett always has felt she set him up. "How do I explain       this? I'm like, all of a sudden I realize I'm, uh, in deep s---!"              In fact, Christa had gone on the "Leeza" talk show the year       before to talk about women who choose to be single parents.              Ava became the center of Christa's universe, says Linda       Schlecter, who babysat a few times a week. "A very devoted       mother and she would always have Ava on her lap and they would       always be playing and laughing," Linda remembers. "Now, I'm just       still in a lot of disbelief about what's happened. It seems so       unreal."              Unreal indeed.              "I walked into the newsroom here in Cape Cod and we just had       gotten word from police that there'd been a murder," remembers       reporter Eric Williams.              It was the first homicide in Truro in 30 years and it sent       Williams into high gear, finding sources, working the phones. It       was Sunday, Jan. 6th, 2002.              "Surprisingly, you know, I knew the guy who found the body. And       next thing I know I'm calling him and talking to him about it,"       Williams recalls.              Williams was calling Tim Arnold, another former boyfriend of       Christa's, who lived just through the woods from her house.       Arnold's story was that he had simply dropped by the house at       4:30 that afternoon to return a flashlight and instead got the       shock of his life.              "He sees Christa lying on the floor in a sort of a kitchen       hallway area and he sees Ava near her mother's body," Williams       explains.              Arnold later told police little Ava was trying to nurse. He said       he'd scooped her up and ran outside. He then called 911:              Operator: 911, this call is recorded. What is your emergency?              Tim Arnold: Please send somebody to 50 Depot Road.              Operator: OK. What's the problem?              Tim Arnold: It's Christa Worthington. I don't know what happened       to her. I think she fell down or something. I'm sure she's dead.              Christa was dead, lying in a hallway off the kitchen. "She was       bruised up, looked like there had been some sort of altercation       that she had been in," Williams explains.              She was half naked, and stabbed once through the left lung. "The       blade went through the body and into the kitchen floor beneath       her body," Williams tells Spencer.              The front door was smashed - there were drag marks on the ground       outside and several personal items scattered in the drive.              The disarray continued inside. Shocked EMTs carelessly grabbed a       blanket from the house to cover Christa's body. Soon, all of       Truro knew what had happened.              "We got a phone call that Christa had been murdered," Tony       Jackett remembers.\              His reaction? Jackett says he felt just disbelief and that the       crime just seemed so senseless.              With all the elements of a classic mystery, sensational reports       of the murder on Cape Cod topped the news around the country,       leaving Christa's nervous neighbors with no reason to suspect       that it would take police literally years to solve this crime,       not that they didn't have plenty of suspects.              "It became some sort, some kind of awful parlor game, you know,       in living rooms on the outer cape. You'd sit around and once       again go through it, trying to figure out, could it have been       Tim? Could it have been Tony? How did it go down?" Williams       remembers.              By the spring of 2005, townspeople were starting to think police       never would figure out who killed Christa Worthington.              NO SHORTAGE OF SUSPECTS       Christa Worthington's savage murder in January of 2002 left 2-       year-old Ava without a mother, and it left the townspeople of       Truro edgy, nervous and silently wondering if the killer might       be one of them.              "Who else would come down to the end of the world in January and       do this?" Williams wonders. "You think, 'It's gotta be someone       who is here, 'cause no one comes here in January.'"              The best potential lead to the murderer's identity was DNA found       on Christa's body.              "It's DNA of an unknown male that's consistent with someone       having had sexual relations and it's that DNA we seek to match,"       explains District Attorney Michael O'Keefe. According to him,       investigators first zeroed in on her immediate circle,       especially past boyfriends.              All the while waiting for the crime lab to find a DNA match,       first there was the neighbor and former boyfriend Tim Arnold.              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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