LuciousSandwich wrote: Wed Dec 11, 2024 9:44 pm
DaveA wrote: Wed Dec 11, 2024 3:21 pm
LuciousSandwich wrote: Wed Dec 11, 2024 2:25 pm
".....communication with a woman from Uzbekistan."
Assuming there's an actual woman involved, I hope she's not someone who does this for a living and reacts badly when a guy actually shows up in person.
Come to think of it, he also has the face of a man who would shop for mail-order brides. In between eyeing up jet skis on Craigslist.
Never said he was some kind of mensch or stand-up guy!
And re-reading all this, he
did take out an insurance policy, so this is absurdly typical stuff, aside from the photo they keep using with him sporting a devious grin.
He's back!
https://abcnews.go.com/US/kayaker-faked ... =116674098
"Borgwardt did reveal to authorities how he faked his death.
"He stashed an e-bike near the boat launch. He paddled his kayak in a child-sized floating boat out into the lake. He overturned the kayak and dumped his phone in the lake," the sheriff said at a news conference in November. "He paddled the inflatable boat to shore and got on his e-bike and rode through the night to Madison, [Wisconsin]. In Madison, he boarded a bus and went to Detroit, and then the Canadian border."
Borgwardt said the Canadian Border Patrol was "suspicious" that he didn't have a driver’s license or flight itinerary with him, but "ultimately, they allowed him to continue," according to the complaint.
At the airport in Toronto, Borgwardt said he bought a flight to Paris. "
I'm mean, sure, it might be sophomoric to make silly assumptions about a stranger who keeps popping up in the news, based in part on his funny grin, but this is all textbook stuff. Pretty cut and dry. He would've made things harder for the authorities if he hadn't taken out that policy. The very first thing cops will ask themselves if someone dies or goes missing is "Who benefits from this?" Then they look into life insurance policies or who will collect an inheritance and so on. If there's anything there, that usually leads them straight to whomever's responsible. This is so common as to be nauseating, you'd think no one would try it, but people still do, every day.
I remember an old episode of
Forensic Files in which an American near the U.S.-Mexico border faked his own death, going so far as to rob a grave before setting his car on fire with the corpse inside it. He almost got away with it. But part of the skull, that was positioned against the floor of the car (why would he die upside-down?) remained intact. And then they examined the dead individual's dental records and found he'd had work done of a style only performed in Latin America.
A former neighbor here set fire to his own house, as part of state-wide insurance fraud scheme. Before this occurred, my dog would always growl at him.