May 21, 2007

LISA STEBIC'S FAMILY IN DENIAL?



I don't care how you look at it...this case is too familiar to that of Scott and Laci Peterson. It is a fact that most crime victims know their perpetrator...and the majority of homicides are committed by someone the victim knows. A large percentage of female homicides are committed by a man they have been involved with.


"In 2003, 1,817 females in the United States were murdered by males in cases in which a single offender killed a single victim. In more than nine in ten of these cases (92 percent), the victim was murdered by someone she knew. Three in five victims who knew their offenders (62 percent) were wives or intimate partners of their killers. " (Source)



If Craig Stebic is indeed the person involved
in Lisa's disappearance, what was his likely motive?


Divorce
Child Support
Child Visitation
Spousal Support
Hatred?


Click here for a detailed listing of domestic homicides of women by state



FAMILY HOLDING OFF BLAME


(Source)--The cousin of missing Illinois mom Lisa Stebic says her family is holding off casting blame on who may be responsible for her disappearance until evidence proves exactly what happened to her. "The police have not told us they have a suspect," Mark Greenberg told FOX News on Monday. "The people pointing fingers at this point are the media."



THE BLOOD STAINED TARP


Craig Stebic's divorce attorney, Dion Davi said that after two searches of the Stebic home earlier this month, he received from police an itemized list of what was taken from the home, which included the family computer. The tarp was not on the list for either of those two searches. That means it may be something else police found after those two searches that prompted the May 14 warrant.


Unnamed police sources said officials used the blood evidence to obtain the warrant by positing a scenario that her husband Craig, an avid hunter, might have used the tarp to transport his wife's body from the home. ...The car the blood was found in was one of the family's two vehicles, a 2002 Chevrolet S-10 pickup truck. Craig Stebic gave police the family's computer but would not submit to a lie-detector test on the advice of his attorney.


...It was reported May 17 that Stebic was trying to have her husband evicted from their Plainfield, Ill., home so the family could "live in peace." Stebic's petition for temporary eviction stated he was being "unnecessarily relentless, cruel, inconsiderate, domineering and verbally abusive." His behavior was "jeopardizing the mental well-being" of their children, she wrote.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

We all know it's the husband, right?