|
Post by politicidal on Jan 22, 2021 15:46:22 GMT
Well this sounds so surreal. TEXT: Solomon posted a thread on his Twitter account earlier today, recounting the chilling story of when he was momentarily a suspect in the Night Stalker case. The screenwriter explains that he was awoken by a phone call in August 1985 from someone who asked him if he was the Night Stalker. He assumed it was a prank, but it kept happening, and he eventually learned that he was a prime suspect in the case after a car that was registered to his address was found at one of the crime scenes. Solomon explained that the police “wouldn’t tell [him] anything about why they suspected [him]” which he called “exceedingly surreal” but he figured out what had happened the next morning when he saw the news. A close friend of his had bought a used car years earlier, and Solomon had signed for his loan, so the car was still registered to his address. Ramirez had stolen the vehicle from its new owner and abandoned it. Fingerprints found in the car ended up being integral to Ramirez’s arrest. screenrant.com/bill-ted-writer-ed-solomon-night-stalker-suspect/
|
|
|
Post by Morgana on Jan 23, 2021 7:52:26 GMT
It's scary how close an innocent person can get to being charged in any crime.
|
|
|
Post by politicidal on Jan 23, 2021 13:29:19 GMT
It's scary how close an innocent person can get to being charged in any crime. Tell me about it. And although I assume he’d been cleared by DNA?
|
|
|
Post by hi224 on Jan 24, 2021 13:05:57 GMT
Well this sounds so surreal. TEXT: Solomon posted a thread on his Twitter account earlier today, recounting the chilling story of when he was momentarily a suspect in the Night Stalker case. The screenwriter explains that he was awoken by a phone call in August 1985 from someone who asked him if he was the Night Stalker. He assumed it was a prank, but it kept happening, and he eventually learned that he was a prime suspect in the case after a car that was registered to his address was found at one of the crime scenes. Solomon explained that the police “wouldn’t tell [him] anything about why they suspected [him]” which he called “exceedingly surreal” but he figured out what had happened the next morning when he saw the news. A close friend of his had bought a used car years earlier, and Solomon had signed for his loan, so the car was still registered to his address. Ramirez had stolen the vehicle from its new owner and abandoned it. Fingerprints found in the car ended up being integral to Ramirez’s arrest. screenrant.com/bill-ted-writer-ed-solomon-night-stalker-suspect/Feasibly reminds me of the author of a Death in Florence, police initially surmised he might've been involved seemingly due to his extensive knowledge of the crime scenes and a resoundingly adept way in which he went into stark and comprehensive detail.
|
|
|
Post by politicidal on Jan 24, 2021 15:40:19 GMT
hi224 wasn’t that The Monster of Florence? But yeah I remember that Douglas Preston was a suspect. I wish that was adapted. Great book.
|
|
|
Post by hi224 on Jan 24, 2021 17:58:08 GMT
hi224 wasn’t that The Monster of Florence? But yeah I remember that Douglas Preston was a suspect. I wish that was adapted. Great book. Was supposed to star Clooney.
|
|