posted on Feb, 14 2009 @ 08:55 AM
The first 48 is the amount of time a detective has to gather information on a homicide(or other crime) before the trail grows cold. I like to watch
this show on A & E and see how quickly law enforcement brings in suspects by talking to just a few witnesses. You will notice also that no family
members of the victims ask the detectives to stop looking for the culprits and let them grieve, ever. I'm making a comparison here to 9/11 but you
can also say the same for the Buffalo Crash.
Why ask questions in the first 48? Just think about the confiscated Pentagon tapes. Why didn't anyone ask to see these videos, they are evidence and
would show what hit the Pentagon. We still don't know the answer. What about the maintenance men reporting bombs in the basement of the WTC where
firefighters found puddles of flowing metal? Barry Jennings said he was "blown" back up the stair well because a bomb went off in WTC 7. This
witness is dead now....
so Asking a witness or suspect simple questions surrounding a suspicious event is no different and it harms no one. It's more likely you will find
the answer to the crime in the first 48.
Since late last August, staff of the A&E channel series "The First 48" have been shadowing the Birmingham Police Department's homicide
detectives for the show's latest installment. The documentary-style show traces the critical first 48 hours of a homicide investigation, after which,
the show's producers say, the detectives' chance of solving a case is cut in
half.
Please visit the link provided for the complete story. www.bwcitypaper.com...