Monday, September 19, 2011

Pings

When your cell phone is turned on and as you move about the city, your cell phone “pings” on the nearest tower. This GPS information is recorded and saved by cell phone carriers for a period of time and will release this information to law enforcement when subpoenaed. Cell phone location records are obtained immediately by law enforcement so that they can place suspects at crime scenes. It’s basic cop 101. 

At will, Baseline detectives Alex Femenia, Mike Meislish, Mike Polombo and others wrote up subpoenas for dozens of people during this investigation. Other suspects, people who talked with Mark on their cell phones, absolutely everybody and anybody they could think of . . . . Except for Mark. 

Well you have to ask, why would they not have Mark’s cell tower pings? The very thing that could place him at the crime scenes? They said they tried, but couldn’t get them. Yeah, right. These dics, who would get cell tower ping records at will, are relying on the general public to be gullible.

Here’s the truth: Somehow, some way, maybe through PPDs good ‘ole buddy networking system or their own forensic software, I can assure you they did in fact acquire Mark’s cell tower pings. They had them and discovered that Mark’s pings did not resonate at a single crime scene. So the records were disposed of, and Femenia and the likes lie and say “we couldn’t get them.” These goons are comfortable hiding exonerating evidence. Look how many years they covered up the Ofc Rusty Stuart’s Terry Wayne Smith investigative report.

Mark was put under surveillance July 14, 2006. Surely at that time, as they did with so many other suspects, would have subpoenaed his cell tower records. Why would they do it in every other situation like this, but not Mark’s? 

It defies logic that they obtained dozens of people’s cell tower records with ease, but were unable to get Mark’s.