IcyHotSonichu
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Third, the preschool teacher also wanted to remain anonymous. FYI some old social media accounts of Kayla's sister are pretty religious so I assume she's going to the same church and was one of the anonymous sources who either talked to cops directly or talked to the pastor.Do the police have any obligation to keep these people anonymous? This is the second person named so far who it is noted wanted to remain anonymous. Is this a fuck up/leak by the police, or do they just not care about anonymizing the names of these witnesses/children?
Technically it didn't say April!Officer Sweep was the one who gets told that April is a live-in janny.
The only reason I could see her getting mentioned would be because she was a possible destination to take the kids while Mr. and Mrs. Balldo get booked, but thats just a guess.View attachment 6032865
Kayla's sister Jaymelee wanted to remain anonymous too... interesting. Did she also blow the whistle?
View attachment 6032866
Jesus imagine being a little kid and asking the cops who broke down your door if you can get some clean clothes.
This is too much, I've officially stayed up too late when I see an officer named "Sweep"Officer Sweep
What is the bar of evidence for probably cause?
That's a stripper. I refuse to believe that's a nanny. Please Nick, for the love of corn, take this to trial so your former Stripper-Nanny testifies.This the nanny?
most interesting thing i see here is the point about someone believing that the youngest kids are not being homeschooled. not sure who would know that or how (ahem, AARON), but definitely not good legally or morally.No it's different...here's more Screenshots...this appears to be AFTER the arrest report and there was some info that had details about the complaints from other people
Based on the contents of the Pinterest, almost 100% sure it is.View attachment 6032911
This the nanny? I refuse to believe that there are many chicks in MN with that name.
most interesting thing i see here is the point about someone believing that the youngest kids are not being homeschooled. not sure who would know that or how (ahem, AARON), but definitely not good legally or morally.
Most people take it orally and its often used as an opioid replacement. Its not chemically similar to actual opioids so it wouldn't show up on those basic reagent kits. You'd need some chemical analysis device like a Thermos Gemini to figure out what it is. The possession and sale of kratom is only restricted only to those under 18 in MN so its one less thing to worry about for the Rekietas.While there are no uses for kratom approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, people report using kratom to manage drug withdrawal symptoms and cravings (especially related to opioid use), pain, fatigue and mental health problems
The short answer is: no. There may be a longer answer involving unusual circumstances, CIs, federal squirrel shit, etc but generally any request to remain anonymous is just that and someone probably shouldn't expect it to work if a case gets built.Do the police have any obligation to keep these people anonymous? This is the second person named so far who it is noted wanted to remain anonymous. Is this a fuck up/leak by the police, or do they just not care about anonymizing the names of these witnesses/children?
negative on all nik tests (lmao) indeed seems to rule out mdma. let's not forget that the detective was a seasoned drug use identifier and so if it's something that he's never seen before then it has to be pretty fuckin obscure or utterly benign. kratom is not a bad suggestion. know-it-all nick very likely had system for self-medicating that probably involved some non-narcotic substances.Mea culpa for the errors, its very late.
View attachment 6032926
Im still curious to know what this mystery powder is. Nik tests are those reagents that police use to field test things and apparently they can test every major drug under the sun including heroin and MDMA.
View attachment 6032934 Figure 1 View attachment 6032943 Figure 2
Heres a chart of what they can detect.
Brown-brown is a nigger tier African concoction, plus it has coke mixed in so it should show up on these tests. Maybe its kratom? From the FDA:
Most people take it orally and its often used as an opioid replacement. Its not chemically similar to actual opioids so it wouldn't show up on those basic reagent kits. You'd need some chemical analysis device like a Thermos Gemini to figure out what it is. The possession and sale of kratom is only restricted only to those under 18 in MN so its one less thing to worry about for the Rekietas.
To be fair, "an anonymous complainant" gives the entire complaint zero credibility should this ever go to court. Without a person ready to swear by the truthfulness of their report, the information therein may as well have appeared to the detective in a dream, as there is no way to prove the veracity of the claims.I love how so many people wanted to stay anonymous but the cops from Podunk PD just fuck is all up.
From my understanding, Anonymity only goes as far as the complaint. The police will not reveal who gave them a tipoff to anyone involved so if the lead goes nowhere it does not effect them. This ends as soon as the arrest is made as thats when tis time to build a case and, presumably, the anonymous tip off no longer needs to worry about backlash against them since fault was found and the case is going forward. So the tipoff proved to be true.The short answer is: no. There may be a longer answer involving unusual circumstances, CIs, federal squirrel shit, etc but generally any request to remain anonymous is just that and someone probably shouldn't expect it to work if a case gets built.
One issue is that stuff can't be held back from the defense in most cases, and much ends up as public record via the courts or potentially state freedom of information requests anyway- except as specifically redacted by statute (typically minors and sometimes sexual assault victims). We've already seen copes that "it's all just third hand gossip from one vindictive person" and shit like that. And if the police don't have actual identities as sources, it might as well be. So if you really want to be anonymous, you can just report without giving your name, but the police are much less able to act on it.
The other issue might be that the department(s) in question might never get any third parties (except maybe the occasional journo) requesting stuff and didn't build much of a system to deal with it- so now maybe the little old lady in records is defaulting to just copying and sending out whatever some random internet shitposter asks for without much review. I hope they are careful when it comes to the cameras, since there are kids involved.
Mea culpa for the errors, its very late.
View attachment 6032926
Im still curious to know what this mystery powder is. Nik tests are those reagents that police use to field test things and apparently they can test every major drug under the sun including heroin and MDMA.
View attachment 6032934 Figure 1 View attachment 6032943 Figure 2
Heres a chart of what they can detect.
Brown-brown is a nigger tier African concoction, plus it has coke mixed in so it should show up on these tests. Maybe its kratom? Its greenish brown (fig2) From the FDA:
Most people take it orally and its often used as an opioid replacement. Its not chemically similar to actual opioids so it wouldn't show up on those basic reagent kits. You'd need some chemical analysis device like a Thermos Gemini to figure out what it is. The possession and sale of kratom is only restricted only to those under 18 in MN so its one less thing to worry about for the Rekietas.
Verypresumably, the anonymous tip off no longer needs to worry about backlash against them since fault was found and the case is going forward.