After viewing the CBS News documentary over "Who Killed Kay Wenal" a former model was found deceased in her Gwinnett County, GA home on May 01, 2008. Investigators only clue to the homicide is part of a white latex glove found by the pool of blood in the kitchen. Furthermore, days after the murder when police interviewed neighbors another clue was reviled of an unknown man was who was leaking around the residence. After a composite sketch was created a "person of interest" was discovered in a photo with Kay and her husband Hal Wenal a few years earlier. Most importantly, a confection letter was mailed to a local new station on July 21, 2008 with magazine clippings forming words. (Solve this case: Who Killed Kay Wenal?, n.d.)
Paradoxically,
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This organization (law enforcement only member based) focuses on connecting law enforcement agencies on an international level. The (IACA) members are individuals with backgrounds in everything from traffic to directors of police departments communicating ideas and working together. Furthermore, distributing the words in Magazines Clippings to the IACA to gather new theories on the true motive on the suspects motive. Perhaps, the same letter was sent to another individual(s) where a fingerprint was found joining the "person of interest".
Step four "Become the Case Expert": Authors Mark Dobbs and Michael Voss document this is the most critical part of salving cold cases. This step requires hours of reading and consuming every piece of data available to the case. For example, actively looking for irregularities such as leads that weren't followed up, physical evidence that could be re-tested (i.e. the latex glove) or scrutinized or whatever else that just doesn't "seem right". Questions I would as myself is where "hunches" followed up on by the first responders? What did the EMT's see, hear, and do at the