View Full Version : Susan Harrison
themaninblack 03-05-2007, 01:05 PM It has been a very long time since i have been to this forum!
i am curious if there is any news on Susan Harrison case.
i think her husband is most likely guilty!
wiseguy182 03-05-2007, 07:09 PM There was only one update ever done on the case, but it was one of those "pseudo-updates" just to let you know that her body had been found by some hikers. Other than that, there has been no news, unfortunately.
LooksLikeCRicci 03-05-2007, 10:15 PM I hate doing this... but, is this the woman who broke up with her husband and moved into a little house and started designing lampshades? Her sons came to check on her and she was nowhere to be found? And then when UM did the update, they flashed out to some remote looking woodsy location and said that they had found her body?
Is this the lady y'all are talking about?
EDIT: I ran my own search on the boards and answered my own question. It IS the woman you're talking about. And yes, I totally think the husband is involved.
NDAlum2003 03-07-2007, 12:29 AM Yes, that's the lady.
Susan's sister, Molly Hurley Moran, published "Finding Susan" in 2003. It's a book about the case and is available on Amazon. This book is an excellent read if you want to learn more about the case.
Susan's husband, Jim Harrison, was never charged in the case, but many are very suspicious of him.
Nobody has ever been charged in her case and it has now been over 10 years since her body was discovered.
themaninblack 03-07-2007, 05:21 PM yeah i read an article about the book yesterday i believe...
the cops say the case is very cold as any evidence that was there has probably disappeared by now...
wiseguy182 05-15-2007, 06:20 AM The police determined that she was murdered. I wonder how (by what means) was she murdered.
I've stated numerous reasons in various threads why I think Jim Harrison is guilty, and I just thought of another after rewatching the segment last night.
The lack of signs of a struggle. This would indicate that Susan knew her assailant.
One thing that seems out of place is the front door being left open when one of the sons came to visit her.
mozartpc27 05-15-2007, 12:12 PM Is this case on any of crystaldawn's collections? Here's another one that sounds none too familiar.
crystaldawn 05-15-2007, 01:47 PM Is this case on any of crystaldawn's collections? Here's another one that sounds none too familiar.
Its on volume 9.
valutime20 05-23-2007, 04:31 AM I (along with everyone here) feel Jim Harrison was guilty. Jim even admitted to failing a polygraph test. He came off pretty bad in his interview as well. Why did he have to mention that she would use bad language? Was it that big a problem?
mozartpc27 06-18-2007, 11:15 AM Its on volume 9.
For some reason, this description did not register in my mind, but I had definitely seen the case before.
The scenario begins when Susan Harrison's son (according to him) confronts her and says she must finally end a long and abusive relationship with her second husband or risk losing contact with her sons forever. According to her sons, she responded to this ultimatum by resolving to break it off permanently. Two days later, one of her sons comes to meet her for a scheduled visit, only to find the door to her house ajar, her car missing, and a set of keys on the table (I don't believe the keys are ever mentioned again past this point --- whose keys were they? Did they ever identify to what car or house or whatever they belonged?). She is nowhere to be found. He waits through the night, goes home to sleep, and calls the next morning. Still no sign of her, so the police are contacted. They go straightaway to her estranged husband's house, and he admits to having seen her on "three separate occasions" on the "previous day" (the timeline is a little unclear to me here --- does this mean he claims she came to see him 3 times on the day she was supposed to meet her son? Or does it mean that he claims that she came to see him 3 times on the day before her son discovered her missing? The UM segment is a little vague). After the last visit, he went to bed in the middle of an argument, and she left, never to be seen again. Her car is later found at the airport, with the keys in the ignition, and a couple years later, her body is discovered out in the woods somewhere. So what happened?
At first glance, this is an obvious "the husband did it during a drunken argument" kind of thing, open and shut. I still think that is the most likely scenario, but there are a few things that don't quite "fit" in my mind. For example, I found it surprising, rewatching the case as I did last night, that Jim Harrison would admit to being in Susan Harrison's company for multiple stretches of time the day of her disappearance. In essence, he handed the police their case: he was the last person known to be alive with her. I don't know what he would have to gain by this --- wouldn't it have been better for him to say "I haven't seen her" since she allegedly ended their relationship once and for all? I don't see how the cops could have proven otherwise, unless neighbors would have recognized her car or heard them arguing and testified she had been there. But, if she was there, then this murder likely happened in the heat of an argument that in all probability, given their respective habits, would have been fueled in large part by alcohol consumption. If that's the case, why was her door found open, as her son testified? That fact would imply she was taken from her home.
One thing that is frustrating here is that, from what can be gleaned from the UM segment, no crime scene was ever identified. I guess the police never had enough probable cause to obtain a search warrant for Jim Harrison's home? I understand why this would have been so at the time the segment was filmed (no body at that time), but after her body was discovered, couldn't a search warrant have been obtained based on the fact that he was the last person seen with her and that there was a detailed police record of domestic violence in the case? And wouldn't a search with Luminal (or however you spell that chemical's name) reveal a crime scene had there been one?
The reason I bring this all up is that identifying the crime scene, in this instance, will dictate the likelihood that her husband was in fact her killer. If she was killed inside his home, the chances he did it are nearly 1:1.
If she was killed outside her home, the chances are maybe 3:1 he did it. Of course, I think, despite the curiously open door, it is unlikely home was the site of the assault that took her life, because there would have been some physical evidence of that, unless she was strangled on the doorstep. That's possible, but then we have to imagine that, drunk though he probably was, Jim Harrison was angry enough to follow her home, catch her before or just as she got inside, and killed her in such a fashion that no blood was spilled. Then he would have had to put her in her own car, driven her out into the woods in the middle of the night, dumped her body, driven the car to the airport, gotten a cab back to her house, and finally driven himself back to his own home. This seems like a pretty wild scenario, but, then again, if she was killed outside her home by someone other than Jim Harrison, the scenario is in some senses even more wild, so I'd say the chances that Jim Harrison did it if the crime scene was her own home are more like 2:1.
The third possibility is that she was taken from outside her own home, explaining the open door, but that she was killed out in the woods. If that's what happened, I think it was almost certianly not Jim Harrison, but either a random killer or someone else she knew who the police have not investigated. Jim Harrison claims she left as he went to bed after their final argument; I wonder how seriously the police ever took this claim? I would have at least hit every bar between her husband's house and her own and shown her picture. Is it possible she left and decided to finish what she started at some bar, only to be followed home by a predator? This would be not unlike what happened to Carolyn Killaby, who was murdered by Dennis Keith Smith. In that case, as I posted in the Dennis Keith Smith thread (http://www.sitcomsonline.com/boards/showthread.php?t=203212), the husband would have certainly been the classic suspect, very similar to many other husbands who apparently killed their still-missing wives (Steven Marfeo, Pamela Page, Paul Pollis, etc.), only it turned out his wife went to a bar and was followed home by a monster of a human being. Is it possible Susan met another man at a bar and agreed to go home with him, maybe even let him drive her car, and ended up his victim? It seems quite possible to me. Did the police even do that but it was left unmentioned in the UM segment?
I think Jim Harrison is very likely the guilty party here. But, even under the most obvious of circumstances --- where he and his wife perhaps got too drunk, fought, and he hit her too hard or too often and ended up killing her --- he'd still have to drive out to the middle of nowhere, intoxicated, in the middle of the night to dump her body, then drive her car to the airport, then get a cab back from the airport to his house. It seems to me that's a lot for a drunk guy to do, and that a cab ride might have easily been discovered. So it makes me wonder.
Finally, and this is where a more intimate knowledge of the timeline would come in handy, but I wonder, just a little, about the sons. They seem very frustrated not only with Jim Harrison in the segment, but, to some extent, with their mother. Suppose that the day she allegedly visited Jim Harrison three times was in fact the same day she was set to meet her son (the day on which she allegedly never showed). Now suppose she does leave Harrison's house, as Harrison claims, and comes home, drunk, perhaps with a shiner or other signs of abuse already, and crying, after she had promised she would never see this man again. Children who come from abused homes are, after all, the most likely to lapse into that sort of behavior themselves. I could see a scenario where the son just gets mad. Mad that she lied, mad that she could keep doing this to herself, mad that she drove drunk (AGAIN, because I doubt this would have been her first time), and perhaps an argument ensues. He's sober, rational, she's drunk, stammering, weak.
There's no evidence for that scenario, and it is monstrous to imagine, but all the driving around that would have been required, etc. It just makes me wonder. If one of the sons did it and had help from the other, there would have been no need to get a cab back from the airport. Disposing of the body would become much easier. It just makes me wonder.
wiseguy182 06-19-2007, 03:51 AM I do appreciate you thinking outside the box mozart, but I'm pretty convinced Jim Harrison is the guilty party here. The sons seemed pretty genuine to me. I don't think they were mad at her, they were just being firm with her. They gave her a "us or him" ultimatum, and the options were her sons or somebody that abused her all the time, not exactly a tough decision. This case resembles Jules and Dottie Caylor alot, in that you have a man that probably got upset because not only was his wife going to leave him, but was going to be pretty happy and successful on top of that, and he couldn't handle it. I think it's just too much to be a coincidence that she disappeared the same day she told him she was leaving him for good.
mozartpc27 06-19-2007, 10:38 AM I do appreciate you thinking outside the box mozart, but I'm pretty convinced Jim Harrison is the guilty party here. The sons seemed pretty genuine to me. I don't think they were mad at her, they were just being firm with her. They gave her a "us or him" ultimatum, and the options were her sons or somebody that abused her all the time, not exactly a tough decision. This case resembles Jules and Dottie Caylor alot, in that you have a man that probably got upset because not only was his wife going to leave him, but was going to be pretty happy and successful on top of that, and he couldn't handle it. I think it's just too much to be a coincidence that she disappeared the same day she told him she was leaving him for good.
Yes, that's probably what happened, and I don't think I even really believe the sons were involved. But that open door at her house... that bugs me.
mozartpc27 10-17-2009, 12:24 AM I was just re-watching some cases and I looked at this one again.
I had, since the time I last saw this case, completely forgotten about my own posts on this case in the past, only stumbling upon them when I searched for Susan Harrison's name in the forum. I searched because I wanted to post.
And what did I want to post about? That open door. That's the whole thing right there. Evidently, it bothered me before, just as it bothered me now.
The open door strongly suggests she was taken from her home. Jim Harrison says she came to his house on three separate occasions right before she disappeared. This leaves me with two questions:
1. Is Jim Harrison telling the truth about her visiting him at all that day? What part of his story is true? All of it? Can any of it be verified?
2. If all of it is true, and it can be verified, then I feel the killer almost certainly must be somebody other than her husband, despite what the evidence suggests. If Jim Harrison was going to kill her, why wouldn't he kill her at his own home? And if he had killed her at his own home, why would her door be found ajar? Was Susan Harrison herself so drunk when she left her home to go to Jim Harrison's home for the last time that she forgot not only to lock but to close her own door? This seems possible but unlikely to me. The most plausible explanation for her door being left ajar is that she was taken away from her home under durress. Only why would Jim Harrison be the one doing the taking in that scenario? If he is telling the truth, he had her drunk and weak and vulnerable in his own home; he could have killed her there. Would his last rage at her really have lasted long enough to follow her home after she left, then get into the fatal confrontation with her at her own home?
Mastermind 10-17-2009, 11:17 AM If Jim Harrison was going to kill her, why wouldn't he kill her at his own home?
Because he would then have to clean up a crime scene in his home. Since most likely he planned this act, I'm pretty sure it occured to him that killing her at his home is not the best thing to do.
Only why would Jim Harrison be the one doing the taking in that scenario?
Because she was belligerent and refused to go with him willingly. Or it became apparent to Susan what was going to happen. It may be as simple as that.
Something I should mention here is that the murder scene might very well be outside rather than inside either home.
Zlatko 11-18-2010, 06:13 PM This case always frustrated me. It seems so clear cut that Jim Harrison was up to something, yet the police didn't nail him.
What also is bothersome is that Jim Harrison claimed that she was horribly abusive to him and that he was the innocent party. Hmm.. many people claimed to have seen marks on Susan. Yeah, talk about innocent. :rolleyes:
DJ_Foxx 11-20-2010, 06:26 PM This case always frustrated me. It seems so clear cut that Jim Harrison was up to something, yet the police didn't nail him.
What also is bothersome is that Jim Harrison claimed that she was horribly abusive to him and that he was the innocent party. Hmm.. many people claimed to have seen marks on Susan. Yeah, talk about innocent. :rolleyes:
"You're being bad again Susan!!!!"
I know it's wrong to laugh in the face of what happened but that commnt aways gets me!
Zlatko 11-20-2010, 08:52 PM "You're being bad again Susan!!!!"
I know it's wrong to laugh in the face of what happened but that commnt aways gets me!Yeah, I giggled at that line as well.
Orgazmo 11-21-2010, 06:26 AM "You're being bad again Susan!!!!"
I know it's wrong to laugh in the face of what happened but that commnt aways gets me!
UM acting at its best!
Jim was so guilty playing down the details on the domestics and surely there cant be too many ways to administer a polygraph? Strap the person in and ask questions?
Any updates? Did Jim kill another woman? I wanna know.
TheCars1986 03-20-2012, 04:13 PM Just rewatched this segment and I'm not sure if this has been posted or not but here's a link (with more info than what was presented in the UM segment) to a website created by Susan's sister: http://www.realcrimes.com/Harrison/Susan_Harrison.htm
My personal opinion on the case is that Jim Harrison is guiltier than hell. He may just be the guiltiest person ever profiled on UM, IMO. There was nothing he said that came off as sincere in his interview and his facial expressions did not appear to be those of a grieving husband (I know everyone grieves in different ways, but this guy was ridiculous). It just seems awful convenient that Susan's car was found at the Reagan Int'l Airport (Jule Caylor anyone?). It's obvious that the car was planted there to try and make people believe that Susan went off to start a new life somewhere. But this is ludicrous. We know that the car was planted there because her remains were found and the coroner concluded that she most likely died the same day she disappeared. Meaning her car was 100%, unequivocally planted at the Airport in DC. Being from MD, I'm familiar with the areas involved in this case. Her car was found at approx. an hour away from where she was last known to have been (at Jim Harrison's house). This case can be solved (IMHO) by answering one simple question: who had the motive to dump the car all the way in DC after murdering Susan? Can you imagine a random intruder/murderer/psychopath going through such lengths to cover up a murder of a woman he did not know at all? There's no doubt in my mind it was Jim Harrison who drove the car to DC after he ditched/buried her body somewhere up in the woods of Baltimore County. I also think it's convenient that the day after Susan went missing her son drove by Jim's house and noticed his car was in the driveway yet Jim was not home, and then when police went to Jim's house hours later (to inform him Susan was missing) they noticed the same thing...Jim Harrison was not home but his car was in the driveway. This was the same day Susan's son reported her missing. Coincidence? It's painfully obvious what was going on at this time! Harrison was working his way on getting back to Baltimore County after parking Susan's car at the airport. How police and prosecutors have yet to charge this man is beyond me. Although if you go to the link I posted, you'll find all sorts of things Jim Harrison has gotten off on because of his status as an ex-CEO of a decorated local company. Seems to me like his wealth and status may have played a factor in LE's inability to press charges.
WishfulDreamer 03-20-2012, 04:40 PM I think, since her sons gave her an ultimatum, that she met up with Jim and told him that she was finally ending it, and would not even see him occasionally anymore. And then he probably snapped and killed her. Did they definitively say how she was murdered? The update didn't say.
TheCars1986 03-20-2012, 04:50 PM I think, since her sons gave her an ultimatum, that she met up with Jim and told him that she was finally ending it, and would not even see him occasionally anymore. And then he probably snapped and killed her. Did they definitively say how she was murdered? The update didn't say.
There's a link from that website that says there was trauma to the head indicating that she was murdered.
EDIT: Here's the exact quote from the Baltimore Sun article: "The remains of Mrs. Harrison were found Nov. 29 in a grave in a rural town in Frederick County. Her death, from head injuries, was ruled a homicide."
Here's the link, but it's only that brief little exerpt from the article: http://www.realcrimes.com/Harrison/Susan_homicide.htm
WishfulDreamer 03-29-2012, 01:54 AM Head injuries? Definitely could be a crime of passion with repeated blows. She may have said she was ending it and he picked up an object in rage.
TheCars1986 03-29-2012, 08:35 AM Seems like Jim Harrison got away with murder because of his "status" in society. :rolleyes:
NDAlum2003 03-29-2012, 02:15 PM I have followed this case for years and have read Susan's sister's book, which is a great read though not real true crime. It does chronicle the entire relationship between Jim and Susan and also gives some behind the scenes information at what went on at a UM shoot back in the 90s.
According to online sources, it appears Jim Harrison passed away in 2007:
http://cornellalumnimagazine.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=106&Itemid=56&ed=5
Given this, this case will probably never be solved, but I still think Harrison is as guilty as sin.
1990 UM fan 08-05-2019, 08:06 AM Susan Harrison was murdered 25 years ago today. We all feel that James killed her, and although he died before any charges could be filed, I hope she can rest. Her sons, Jon and Nick, have done well with their lives since, but I am sure they wish their mother was here to enjoy life with them.
MIKEPR 04-11-2020, 06:05 PM One thing I wonder if I remember correctly Mrs. Harrison was married previously and if I'm right I wonder what ever happened to her first husband and if so was he dead or divorced from Mrs. Harrison?
OK I just typed up the UM Wiki page and it looks like she was previously married and while he saw his sons I wonder now why he didn't have custody of them like he should of or at least from the time she remarried?
1990 UM fan 04-11-2020, 11:29 PM One thing I wonder if I remember correctly Mrs. Harrison was married previously and if I'm right I wonder what ever happened to her first husband and if so was he dead or divorced from Mrs. Harrison?
OK I just typed up the UM Wiki page and it looks like she was previously married and while he saw his sons I wonder now why he didn't have custody of them like he should of or at least from the time she remarried?
Her divorce from Tom Owsley was amicable and they shared custody of Jon and Nick.
MIKEPR 04-12-2020, 08:28 AM Her divorce from Tom Owsley was amicable and they shared custody of Jon and Nick.
Uh I'm well aware of that.
EighthStreet 04-26-2020, 07:43 AM Uh I'm well aware of that.
Then why did you ask the question?
MIKEPR 04-26-2020, 08:25 AM Just shut up if you can't answer the question I posted!
LooksLikeCRicci 04-26-2020, 06:39 PM Just shut up if you can't answer the question I posted!
“SUSAN! You’re being BAD again....”
Friendly neighborhood mod here:
Let’s keep it civil. I’m not going to tell anyone they can’t post, but I *am* going to demand that we keep it civilized and respectful. If you’ve got issue with a poster? That’s fine. Ignore them and use that awesome mute/ignore function!
Social distancing has been tough on everyone. Let’s be kind.
TheCars1986 04-27-2020, 07:31 AM I can't believe Jim Harrison died without ever facing any consequences for murdering Susan. It's like the police said "meh, next case" after her remains were found.
LooksLikeCRicci 04-27-2020, 12:50 PM I can't believe Jim Harrison died without ever facing any consequences for murdering Susan. It's like the police said "meh, next case" after her remains were found.
That's where I fell, too. I mean, I think it's obvious he did it, but perhaps they were just missing that piece of evidence that would have linked him to the case....
mwcarolina 05-24-2020, 06:01 PM I fully believe that Jim is responsible. His story was so lame
. Too bad he can’t be charged
Huskerz85 10-29-2020, 01:39 PM Just re-watched this one and wanted to repeat some thoughts from another thread.....
I don't doubt that he laid hands on her now and then. I don't think he intentionally killed her though. Given the nature of their relationship, I think there was probably an altercation of some sort and he could've hit or shoved her and while not meaning to kill her, he accidentally did. Afterwards, he panicked and went to the bizarre lengths that he did to cover his tracks (which also explains why his statements/appearance in the segment came off just as weird)
mwcarolina 11-14-2020, 01:28 AM I don't doubt that he laid hands on her now and then. I don't think he intentionally killed her though. Given the nature of their relationship, I think there was probably an altercation of some sort and he could've hit or shoved her and while not meaning to kill her, he accidentally did.
I agree here. I don’t think he planned to do it, just a fight gone bad type of deal
MediaHoarder 09-23-2024, 11:20 AM Just watched this segment. Mystery aside, I find the whole thing darkly comical. Especially the lampshades thing. "I don't want these lampshades in my house" is such a line. Then the fact that she opens up a lampshades business? And right before she went missing where they show Jim trying to sweet talk her "you can decorate this room the way you always wanted" as if he is finally caving in on having awful lampshades in his home. Seriously this one could have been nicknamed lampshades.
Down to business, I have to say I'm not convinced Jim was involved here. Reading the subtext of the segment...there seems to be something else going on. Susan met Jim via her husband, then later left her husband for Jim...I'm guessing there was something going on before the divorce. Later on she starts having problems with Jim and leaves him for a while. Starting to think the common thread here is her. In any case, she moves out and starts a (lampshades!) company and for the first time in her life (sometime in her fifties) is actually earning her own living (well maybe, we can get back to that).
There is no mention of her finding another man while she was away from Jim, but I do wonder if she did. Obviously the police would look at this if they were doing their jobs but there are two potential problems. First, she may have kept quiet about it because she was still married to Jim and having an affair might negatively impact any divorce proceedings. She may have also wanted to sort out her life before introducing more drama to her kids etc. The second issue is that in cases where the spouse can be a natural suspect the police tend to hone in on that and ignore alternative explanations. I wouldn't be surprised if little was done to check her life outside of the relationship with Jim.
But if she was seeing someone, perhaps it wasn't working out, at least enough for her to try and patch things up with Jim. Or rather, I suspect that she discovered actually earning a living is hard, and selling lampshades isn't the kind of money a CFO makes at a major company and she missed the lifestyle Jim could afford for her. And then the family gives her an ultimatum. She says she is done with Jim and then disappears thereafter.
And this is where I wonder if she was seeing someone on the side that was mad she went back to Jim and left them. Perhaps she had found someone younger, more hot headed, and with less money, the sort that might be a fun fling for her but she wasn't that serious about. Maybe someone felt used, wasn't interested in her protests that she was finally leaving Jim. And then after she was dead the police zeroed in on the husband like clockwork and the unknown guy faded into the darkness.
In any case this one doesn't look like it will ever be solved, but I'm glad it was included in the Amazon releases.
MediaHoarder 09-23-2024, 11:20 AM Just watched this segment. Mystery aside, I find the whole thing darkly comical. Especially the lampshades thing. "I don't want these lampshades in my house" is such a line. Then the fact that she opens up a lampshades business? And right before she went missing where they show Jim trying to sweet talk her "you can decorate this room the way you always wanted" as if he is finally caving in on having awful lampshades in his home. Seriously this one could have been nicknamed lampshades.
Down to business, I have to say I'm not convinced Jim was involved here. Reading the subtext of the segment...there seems to be something else going on. Susan met Jim via her husband, then later left her husband for Jim...I'm guessing there was something going on before the divorce. Later on she starts having problems with Jim and leaves him for a while. Starting to think the common thread here is her. In any case, she moves out and starts a (lampshades!) company and for the first time in her life (sometime in her fifties) is actually earning her own living (well maybe, we can get back to that).
There is no mention of her finding another man while she was away from Jim, but I do wonder if she did. Obviously the police would look at this if they were doing their jobs but there are two potential problems. First, she may have kept quiet about it because she was still married to Jim and having an affair might negatively impact any divorce proceedings. She may have also wanted to sort out her life before introducing more drama to her kids etc. The second issue is that in cases where the spouse can be a natural suspect the police tend to hone in on that and ignore alternative explanations. I wouldn't be surprised if little was done to check her life outside of the relationship with Jim.
But if she was seeing someone, perhaps it wasn't working out, at least enough for her to try and patch things up with Jim. Or rather, I suspect that she discovered actually earning a living is hard, and selling lampshades isn't the kind of money a CFO makes at a major company and she missed the lifestyle Jim could afford for her. And then the family gives her an ultimatum. She says she is done with Jim and then disappears thereafter.
And this is where I wonder if she was seeing someone on the side that was mad she went back to Jim and left them. Perhaps she had found someone younger, more hot headed, and with less money, the sort that might be a fun fling for her but she wasn't that serious about. Maybe someone felt used, wasn't interested in her protests that she was finally leaving Jim. And then after she was dead the police zeroed in on the husband like clockwork and the unknown guy faded into the darkness.
In any case this one doesn't look like it will ever be solved, but I'm glad it was included in the Amazon releases.
TheCars1986 09-25-2024, 10:03 AM This (https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/mccormick-bigwig-jim-harrison-wife-susan-hurley-harrison-disappearance/) article goes into great detail about this case and covers some things that UM didn't mention (a telephone repair man was working on a utility pole right outside of Jim Harrison's residence (https://www.google.com/maps/@39.4366933,-76.6561364,3a,75y,328.51h,95.67t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sT1qG_k3dqDrDmJuV6yX9Zw!2e0!7i16384!8i8192?coh=205409&entry=ttu&g_ep=EgoyMDI0MDkyMi4wIKXMDSoASAFQAw%3D%3D) at 4 a.m. on the morning of Susan's disappearance, and he said he heard a door slam and saw and heard a car start and leave Jim Harrison's residence). It's a great read.
|