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originally posted by: 35Foxtrot
a reply to: Vasa Croe
More suspicious, to me at least, is that the husband is the one that "found" her....
He "dreams," she was at the same beach and then returns to look for her...
"Holy sheet! Here she is officer... Please stop investigating her disappearance now."
And, how convenient that she is unable to talk now... Let's get this lady a pen and paper!
Bet the first thing she writes is, "He beat the crap out of me and locked me in the basement!"
originally posted by: Trueman
a reply to: DerBeobachter
She needs a full x-ray to check everything is there and also to look for implants.
originally posted by: UnBreakable
originally posted by: 35Foxtrot
a reply to: Vasa Croe
More suspicious, to me at least, is that the husband is the one that "found" her....
He "dreams," she was at the same beach and then returns to look for her...
"Holy sheet! Here she is officer... Please stop investigating her disappearance now."
And, how convenient that she is unable to talk now... Let's get this lady a pen and paper!
Bet the first thing she writes is, "He beat the crap out of me and locked me in the basement!"
I thought it was the father who found her.
I'm still trying to figure out how a wave would sweep her out to sea. Even with strong rip tides or under tow people usually stay within the current and when they leave the current then they don't drift very much. I can't see how rescuers couldn't find her if they were notified quickly.
It is easy to be caught in a rip current. Most often, it happens in waist-deep water, experts say. A person will dive under a wave, but when they resurface they find they are much farther from the beach and still being pulled away.
Rip Currents: The Ocean's Deadliest Trick A rip current near Melbourne, Fla., after Hurricane Jeanne. Credit: NOAA Every year, more than 100 beachgoers on average drown due to these strong river-like channels of water that pull swimmers away from the shore, according to the U.S. Lifesaving Association (USLA). And that's just in the United States.
it's not unusual depending on how she was dressed. She could of been wearing shorts and tank top. Plus she's in her fifties indicative she came clothed to just get some sun and watch the youngins have fun
originally posted by: CynConcepts
originally posted by: Vasa Croe
The odd part about the story to me is this:
What is even more baffling is she was still wearing the same clothes she had on when she disappeared 18 months earlier.
Nining Sunarsih, a woman in her early 50s was holidaying in Sukabumi in West Java last January.
She was reportedly enjoying a dip in the waters off Citepus Beach when a strong wave swept her away, carried out by strong currents into the open sea.
Why was she fully dressed enjoying a dip in the waters?
Same clothes could mean she was still wearing her swim apparel. If not, and she was fully dressed it would be unusual. It does not state that she was fully dressed though...just states she was wearing the same clothing that she was swept away in.
lol riggggght? Good analogy.
originally posted by: 35Foxtrot
a reply to: Vasa Croe
More suspicious, to me at least, is that the husband is the one that "found" her....
He "dreams," she was at the same beach and then returns to look for her...
"Holy sheet! Here she is officer... Please stop investigating her disappearance now."
And, how convenient that she is unable to talk now... Let's get this lady a pen and paper!
Bet the first thing she writes is, "He beat the crap out of me and locked me in the basement!"
originally posted by: 35Foxtrot
a reply to: Vasa Croe
More suspicious, to me at least, is that the husband is the one that "found" her....
He "dreams," she was at the same beach and then returns to look for her...
"Holy sheet! Here she is officer... Please stop investigating her disappearance now."
And, how convenient that she is unable to talk now... Let's get this lady a pen and paper!
Bet the first thing she writes is, "He beat the crap out of me and locked me in the basement!"
originally posted by: Vasa Croe
The odd part about the story to me is this:
What is even more baffling is she was still wearing the same clothes she had on when she disappeared 18 months earlier.
Nining Sunarsih, a woman in her early 50s was holidaying in Sukabumi in West Java last January.
She was reportedly enjoying a dip in the waters off Citepus Beach when a strong wave swept her away, carried out by strong currents into the open sea.
Why was she fully dressed enjoying a dip in the waters?