Sarah Turney
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
They've improved the resolution a bit, but it still wasn't clear enough to make out the potential suspect.
I'm sure that this has stuck with Jennifer's family forever.
It's things like this, again, where you think about the what-ifs.
What if we just had that security footage?
What if it was just a little bit more clear?
It feels like the answers are right there, but they just can't physically see them in that video.
And I can't even imagine how that makes them feel.
I think it makes it even harder to understand if this was meticulously planned out or just kind of done last minute, if this was a crime of opportunity.
It's January 26th, 2006, 810 a.m.
Jennifer Kesey's car is found in the parking lot of the Huntington on the Green condominium complex, less than a mile from her home.
A bloodhound named Beau is dispatched that day.
He pulls the smell from the driver's seat and follows a trail.
It leads police back to Jennifer's complex.
The trail actually bypassed the complex's main gated entrance and led to a stretch of fence that separated the private property from the public sidewalk.
The dog followed that scent through the fence, onto the property, and directly to the rear staircase leading to Jennifer's condo.
So police think the assailant went back on foot after dropping off the vehicle to Jennifer's condo.
What the dog can't tell them is who the scent belongs to, or why they'd go back to the scene of the crime.
It's such a hard situation.
I mean, I think all families want to have hope, right?
But it's also horrific to think about somebody going into human trafficking.