Kaelyn Moore
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And these cameras all fed in to a digital video recorder, aka the DVR, where the footage was then stored locally rather than on the internet up in a cloud, all right there in that little box.
So if the DVR was ruined, it meant there was no backup, no way to find that footage anywhere else, gone.
And Nanette trusted this system.
She even told her father on multiple different occasions, quote, as long as I have my guns and the cameras and I'm at home, I'm safe.
So whoever entered the house that day, one, was likely captured on those cameras.
Two, the footage probably went then to the DVR and was recorded.
And three, they knew exactly where that DVR was located to then pour accelerant all over it and make sure it was destroyed.
And I will tell you another part of our botched.
This DVR was left behind on the initial search.
They did not grab that DVR upon initial search.
Despite the damage, the sheriff's department sent the DVR off to the FBI to see if they could recover any data.
Unfortunately, the FBI didn't offer much help.
There was nothing useful that could be recovered.
Regardless, it's kind of looking like an inside job or someone with very intimate knowledge of this house and where things were located.
Yeah, it feels like that honestly could be a bit of a botched too.
We've seen in so many cases how much the public can help and how much releasing a video can jog people's memories.
I know.
If someone went through the line behind her, why are we not looking at other transactions?
It's interesting.
Around September 2017, the coroner's office and sheriff's office