if they killed her too
that whole family would be in deep *beep* seeing as their son killed the husband and police would find him, as well as the kid that was burned alive
someones in my fruit cellar someone with a fresh soul
that whole family would be in deep *beep* seeing as their son killed the husband and police would find him, as well as the kid that was burned alive
someones in my fruit cellar someone with a fresh soul
What happens in the woods, stays in the woods. The missing city folk would be weighed up and depending on their value their metro police will decide how far in to the countryside to investigate before putting it down as a longstanding missing persons.
Or, the metro cops will maybe contact the local law enforcement and ask one of them to keep an eye out for them while they are doing the rounds on their tractor/bicycle. Hot Fuzz is a comic -but staggeringly accurate- portrayal of bumpkin bobbies (or 'hillbilly Five-O', as we call them in Scotland).
Ya Kirk-loving Spocksucker!
You are talking garbage. So a middle -class couple go missing and you think their families and friends will jus accept some lame excuse? I think not. And don't forget the Asian they killed. Will his family just accept the same? Won't it seem strange when so many people have disappeared at the same time. And you're talking as if the woods are the size of Montana. This is England. We don't have big forests left.
shareThis. Also the police would easily find the vehicle in the woods that belonged to the couple. Now, I've never been to England but if the woods are as big as you described, after/whenever that vehicle would be recovered, it would be hard NOT to find Adam (the Asian who got burned alive), or the "friend" Brett trampled to death.
Don't you know history repeats itself? Hmm Sid?- Scream 2
With so much evidence around it would be sure to be found... and yes they would all then be guilty of murder - she would have a legitimate self-defence defence for her actions.
England is not the USA... something on this scale cannot be 'disappeared' in England.
Especially given police access to mobile phone data and DNA forensics.