Home Categories detective reasoning 8 strange cases in the United States

Chapter 120 chapter 2

In fact, a week before Ling Dan Garton's phone call, the school district office had received a report, but the content was far less detailed than Ling Dan's.The relevant parties did not take immediate action because they often received similar reports about what happened to a certain teacher and a certain student.Most of the results of the investigation are groundless speculations, and even slanderous rumors with ulterior motives.But such an outrageous incident between a female teacher and a male student is unheard of and shocking. The day after Ling Dan made the call, there was a call from the Kenn Regional Police Station to verify the situation.A female police officer named Padisia Mailer said on the phone that according to the clues provided by Ling Dan, one of the boys involved was a seventh-grade student, that is to say, he had just graduated from Shorewood Primary School and was promoted to Cascade Secondary School.But according to the results of the police investigation, there was no student named Bailey in the sixth grade class that Mary Kay taught last year.There are 12 years of primary and secondary schools in the United States, including six years of elementary school-grades one to six, two years of junior high school-grades seven and eight, and four years of high school-grades nine-twelfth.

The Heinlein School District Office was also made aware of the situation.By this time, the word had been whispering among the staff that someone remembered an incident that had occurred about eight months earlier. It was Monday, June 19, 1996, and the school had just started summer vacation.In the middle of the night, security guard David Shields, who was patrolling the Des Moyne Wharf, saw a family van driving around the parking lot.The car had Alaska license plates.The car drove slowly and wobbled, and on several occasions when backing up, the rear wheels rode the pavement or rolled into a flowerbed beside the road.David suspected that the driver was driving under the influence of alcohol, so he summoned the patrolman from the Des Moines Police Station by walkie-talkie.

Soon, the van left the pier and still drove crookedly to the "Anthony's Home Cooking" restaurant not far away. After turning around the restaurant a few times, it turned off the engine in the corner of the parking lot with a fence. Two patrolmen arrived one after another. They first stood in the dark with David and observed for a while.Under the dim street lights, there seemed to be no one in the car.After ten minutes, a woman sat up from the back of the car and moved to the driver's seat. The patrolmen outflanked the van from left to right.At a distance of about 10 feet, they all turned on their flashlights and flashed their police badges.Through the window of the driver's seat, Bob Cheddar saw an extremely handsome young woman with long flaxen hair and olive green eyes.Barbara opened the door and saw a woman wearing a long T-shirt with a short thin woolen skirt exposed underneath, with bare feet.The woman refused to get out of the car, and refused to answer the patrolmen's questions. It took half a day to tell her that her name was Mary Kay Letourneau, she was a teacher at Shorewood Primary School, and she lived in Normandy Park.

The patrolmen shot the electric light at the back seat, but saw that the back of the seat had been completely flattened, making it look like a bed.A boy curled up in a sleeping bag on the "bed", motionless, no matter how the patrolmen called or pushed him, he would not open his eyes.The patrolmen had to turn to Mary Letourneau again: "What are you doing with this boy in the back of the car?" Robert Collins asked. Mary Kay said Willie Varrao - the boy's name was her student.His mother worked night shift today, and entrusted her to take care of the child for one night.Willie was supposed to spend the night at the Letourneau's, but Mary Kay and her husband, Steven Letourneau, had had a big fight about something a little over an hour ago and she brought Willie out up.

"I wanted to teach him a lesson," Mary Kay said, "so I decided to hang out until he got to work and then go back." Sita Airport.He works early this week and leaves home at 3:30 every morning. "The two of us just wanted to take a nap before going back." "Your age?" asked Bob Cheddar, making notes. "Thirty-two," said Mary Kay. Bob waved the flashlight at Mary Kay's face again, thinking she didn't look thirty-two. "What about him?" Bob pointed to the boy in the sleeping bag with his flashlight. "Eighteen," thought Bob, who didn't look eighteen either.

Des Moines is about 15 minutes' drive south of the White Centre, across the Normandy Park.Robert Collins immediately called the Normandy Park Police and asked them to send someone to Letourneau's house to check. After 20 minutes, the other party replied that no one answered the phone or answered the door at Letourneau's house. Willie Vallao finally "woke up".The patrolmen asked him to get dressed and said they would take him to the police station.Until things are cleared up, they are responsible for "custodial" minors.Mary Kay objected vigorously, accusing the police of making a fuss out of a molehill.She said she was an educator and a friend of the Varaos, and that she and Willie weren't doing anything shady in the back of the car.

The patrolmen said that your story sounds sound, but your attire is somewhat suspicious. Mary Kay followed to the police station in a van, and she said that since Mrs. Varao had entrusted the child to her, she must be responsible to Willie.In the police office, the young man told the police that he was 14 years old this year, and because he was not yet 16, he did not have any identification documents, such as a driver's license.He said he was at the Letourneau's when the Letourneaus quarreled.Steven, Mary Kay's husband, said something that upset him, and he ran out in a fit of anger.When he ran to the QFC store on Seaview Street near the Letourneu home, Mary Kay caught up with him in a car and the two went to Des Moines Wharf together.They didn't really do anything, they just dazed behind the car for a while because they were so sleepy.

It took several phone calls before the officers found Willy's mother, Sonna Vallao, who was working the night shift at Prahi Bakery.Sonna was not at all surprised by the police report, saying she trusted Mrs. Letourneu so much that "as long as Willie is with her, it's fine."She demanded that the police immediately return Willie to Mrs Letourneau. Unable to obtain conclusive evidence, the Des Moines Police Department had to release Mary Kay Letourneu and Willie Varao around 4 a.m. that day.
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