Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Amanda Blackburn Murder & Pronouns Examined


Question for Analysis: 

Is it possible that the husband of murder victim Amanda Blackburn uses the pronoun "we" because he sees himself as connected to divinity?

Let's examine this. 

The more one speaks, the more sample we have for analysis, and the broader the reference point or "baseline" we have to work with. 

Pronouns are intuitive and are used to solve crimes.  How powerful are pronouns?

When someone goes from "I" to "we" without any contextual justification, it is due to guilt.  This is commonly found in case after case, from murder to theft, and is so common, in fact, that parents and teachers pick it up in children. 

It is done to either hide within a crowd, or spread out the guilt, psychologically, as it lessens the impact of guilt. This guilt is not always the 'conscience' or cognizance of having failed morally, but a negative reaction in some solely wishing not to be caught.  True sociopaths feel this stress or guilt, as it is commonly called, even if they care for no one other than their own selves. 

In the murder of Amanda Blackburn, there is a list of coincidence which investigators say point to this murder being not random nor exclusively a home invasion.  Here is why:

Home invasions are for the purpose of quick profit.  

Investigators say most home invasions target the victim specifically for wealth, especially for cash, as in drug dealers.  Others will grab the most valuable easily carried and pawned items for quick sale.  The younger the invaders, the more unpredictable, including the penchant for violence. However, sexual homicide is not something expected to be seen.  

In this murder, a reporter disclosed "sexual assault" which was later on refuted.  

The removal of the victim's clothing is a sexual assault unless there is another explanation such as "staging", or corpse removal.  Since she was left still alive, corpse removal is not likely.  This leaves sexual assault or appearance (staging) of sexual assault and the journalist was correct, even if no forensic evidence is conclusive.  Was this an intended rape?  Did she fight off the rapist who then shot her?

Yet, even this is strange:  she was shot three times.  

The point of shooting her more than once was to kill her; as a single shot would likely end any fight or struggle, and speaks more to an execution.  

Police had video of the shooter or gang, outside the home, and knew, with "100% accuracy" that the husband, Davey Blackburn, was not the shooter. 

Video tape evidence at the gym showed him there during the time period of which the victim was likely shot.  This was something, while the shooter was not arrested, was stated with emphasis by police:  removing doubt that Blackburn was the shooter, but the investigation had to continue.  They needed to learn:

Why was Amanda Blackburn murdered?  

This would eventually answer more questions, including:  Is the husband responsible for the murder?

This is the question that has been debated greatly in newsgroups.  

Circumstantial:

1.  The husband was obsessed with work.
2.  The wife complained of his obsession with work.
3.  The husband said it was a bad marriage and gave specific sexual complaints against her. 
4.  The husband said the marriage got worse with pregnancy.
5.  Pregnancy demands interfere with work obsession. 
6.  The husband said he had sexual temptation at the gym. 
7.  The wife was shot while he was at the gym. 
8.  The husband brandished a gun at work 2 days prior. 
9.  The wife died from a gun. Criminal psychologists ask "Was this on his mind at the time?"
10. The husband spent one hour, each Tuesday, on the phone with the same person, the day Amanda was killed.  On this day, however, the bulk of the call was in the driveway:  he did not enter the home.  

The wife became pregnant, again, and now is removed from the equation. 

Linguistically, Blackburn uses the language of guilt.  

1.  Distance from the victim 
2.  Subtle disparagement of the victim 
3.  Distance language from family
4.  Distance language from impact 
5.  No linguistic fear of killer 
6.  Pronouns

Pronouns. 

In repeated statements and questions related to the murder of Amanda, Blackburn uses the pronoun "we", rather than "I", even when seated alone. 

When asked about what it felt like, "as a man of God" to be investigated, he said,

"For us, we have nothing to hide."

This begs the question, "who is 'us'?" and "who is 'we'?" by the news broadcaster.  

It was not asked. 

Recently, Blackburn spoke about a direct revelation he had from God.  The analysis of such is found here: Deception Indicated.

To indicate deception in this "revelation" the subject must know and show awareness that he intends to deceive people. 

He began with "I had a thought", which went to "God spoke to my heart", as if an impression, but once qualified, he then gave direct quotes.  This is to claim direct revelation from God, Himself, and then he used this "Divine Authority" or marching orders to not only declare a vision, but to insult an entire church in front of its pastor, his father-in-law:  the victim's father. 

This is to show himself "above", both in authority and in 'relation to God', to the man who may suspect him in dispatching his daughter.  By using the 2 qualifiers, he did what deceptive people do, with rapid transmission:  gave himself an out. 

This is a signal that he is well rehearsed in deception and may be a pathological liar. 

Note the import of the lie:  it made him and his company a historical figure of prominence. 

Now consider that in this short speech, the use of the pronoun "I" was used, and in it, God used his first name, which is given for emphasis.  

He then said that the murder victim died so the church could come to life.  It was a trade in which he used sensitive emphasis, or the need to persuade, that it is something he would not have done. 

Please note:  

To this, he was "alone" in his pronoun use. 

He, alone, spoke to God.
He, alone, will pastor the "army" that will go forth in historical manner. 

When he addresses Amanda's murder, he is "we" and he is "us", who has "nothing to hide."

When a 13 year old boy stands before his junior high school principal and says, "I have nothing to hide" it is a signal to see what's in his locker, on his person, etc.  The crude remark is, "he has a turd in his pocket" when he said that.  

It is a linguistic signal that the subject, at this moment, is thinking of things he does not want known and is concerned about them being found.  We note what topic (context) produces this response.  

When this arises with the plural pronoun, it indicates:

a.  That there is something, or some things, hidden, of which the subject does not want known
b.  That the subject is thinking of this hidden item in correlation with someone else; or
c.  That which is hidden produces guilt of which the guilt is mitigated by a crowd.  

Analysis Question:  Given the 'divine revelation' claim, is it possible that Blackburn sees himself as 'one' with God, or in some strange way, a 'trinity' of sorts, or even of such divine cooperation that he is so close that this would produce the pronoun "we" in his language?


Answer:  No.  This is not supported by the context. 

We look at what produces the pronoun "we" in his language, versus what produces the normal, "I" in his language and we find, consistently, a need to 'go plural' regarding the murder and its impact.  

It is alarming that he has now found a "justification" for the victim's death.  The "murder" (that which he called an 'event'  or 'situation' early on) was something that "baffled the family", but now, not only does he know "why" she died, but her death is 'good' for his career, something he has obsessed about repeatedly. 

Objection:  Maybe the hurt is so bad that he retreats to the plural?

Answer:   The truth is the opposite.  

The murder of a wife is 'up close' and 'personal' and as we are possessive creatures, even against all 'political correctness', husbands and wives claim personal ownership over each other.  The second most 'personal' death would be that of a biological child. 

In language, this is where we hear "I", most often, even when a spouse is seated with other family members.  

The other family members do not have the same close personal connection with the victim as the spouse.  

The same is seen in child deaths.  

In using emotional language in a you tube video, he expressed a stronger emotional pronoun about the failure to obtain numbers for his company, with this "disappointment" connected to reliably with the pronoun "I"; and in context, the negative comparison was with 'souls saved', which revealed priority and obsession. 

In the claim of having a conversation with God, he gives signals of deception which indicates that he knows this is not true, and needs not only to convince the audience, but will have a technical "out" upon being challenged.  "I said it was a 'thought'!"  This is commonly used in deceptive advertising today.  It is sometimes used conversationally in insults where the subject later says, "I was only kidding" having done the damage and communicated the message. 

That the murder victim lost her 'life so the church could live' is not simply of concern to orthodox Christianity which teaches that Christ died to give life, but to criminal investigators as to possible motive. 

Blackburn's use of pronouns, as well as his rapidity of transmission suggests a history of successful deception and may be a pathological liar. 

A motive for possible connection to the shooter, even through various layers and connections to criminal elements, that should be considered is the profit to be gained from her death. 

In his first statement, he used her death for advertising purposes and has consistently done so since.  

Criminal investigators look into any possible planning and preparation, even while looking at the profile of one:

a.  Does he have a history of lying?
b.  Does he have a history of narcissism?
c.  Is there a history of... and it goes on looking into all possibilities leading to,

"Can we locate a connection between the shooter, his gang and any adult, including the husband?" 

The final pronoun objection is this:

The pronoun use of "we" is delusional. 

This is not evidenced in the language.  The delusional will not use qualifiers such as "I had a thought" and "felt like...my heart..."  They do not show, in language, the need to deceive when speaking under clinical delusion.  

The delusional will speak of voices, directly and commands.  In the delusional, it is often difficult to pick up deception. "The angel Gabriel came to me today and said..." was told to me in an interview.  The subject was delusional but the sentence structure shows no intention of deception.  This is where lie detection picks up its signals:  intent to deceive.  

When we commonly speak of 'delusions of grandeur' it is not in the clinical sense of delusion.  It can be a young boy believing against evidence that he will be a professional sports star, or someone who simply has a confidence that he or she is born to greatness yet unfulfilled.  This expression is commonly used to describe extreme ego, but it is not to say that the person is delusional. 

This was seen in the Casey Anthony trial where the women interrupted it and was given a light sentence under the claim of "not knowing what she was doing" because she was off her medication.  

She knew how to get dressed, and knew which streets to navigate to get to the address of the court house.  She knew which courthouse room to enter.  She knew what time it started.  She knew the television cameras were on.  

It showed planning. 

In the murder of Amanda Blackburn, investigators explore any possible planning involved.  

The original question posed about the use of the plural pronoun having connection to 'divine' association is viewed in context which allows the subject to answer the question, himself, via his own language.  

In connection to having a personal conversation with God, he does not retreat to 'we', as he did in questions related to the victim's murder, or its impact upon him, or his son. 

Investigators should be very concerned about his public justification of Amanda's murder. 

While all things eventually come together to produce good is a long term act of faith, which cannot see what possible good can come of something like this, calling the faithful to trust, here we have something investigators must consider as motive: 

that Amanda died so his company would grow. 

Davey Blackburn has not been charged, nor implicated by police as having any connection to the murder of Amanda Blackburn.   Blackburn, himself, has not only advertised the murder for his own profit, but has made all of these statements available to the public for their opinion and judgement to be exercised.  

Although I do not know if he has any indirect association to the murder, I am alarmed by the coincidental nature of the case, the language of guilt, and the justification of her murder, under the veil of religious language.  

In my own work, I recognize that "for us, we have nothing to hide" is not simply the language of guilt, but of something hidden.  That which is hidden may not be association to Amanda's killers.

It is something, but I have yet to conclude what I think it is. 

I am bothered by the new 'motive' and justification for Amanda's death; not because of Christian blasphemy; from a deceptive one deception will come, but because it so quickly turns something so ugly into something 'positive.'

Far too little time has elapsed for such. 

The need to justify is sometimes found in the language of killers.  It is predominantly hidden, or subtle, but it is often there. The one exception I have learned from is Tammy Moorer:  she justified the killing of Heather Elvis openly.  This is the only example I have seen in which, prior to arrest, one has spoken thus.  

This is more the language of one convicted who has exhausted appeals and the truth comes out. 

Every other example I have studied and taught to investigators is subtle, teaching them to look for quiet, small words used to justify the homicide; especially domestic homicides. 

In shaken baby syndrome, the baby is blamed for not 'cooperating'; in child molestation the child 'flirted'; 
In teenagers killed or abused, 'hormones' are cited. 

When one dies, people, especially loved ones, speak only the positive, quickly forgetting the flaws. 

That Amanda was "not well read" (which justifies the humiliation she experienced on video) is a subtle insult of her intellect.  

That the husband is so driven as to even use 'sloganism' in her death is concerning.  

Cold case detectives have to have thick skin.  

By virtue of their work, they 'criticize' the failure of others.  


1,015 comments:

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JBB said...

So sorry to interrupt with this. I love reading everyone's comments. There's some really good insight!

I am looking at this site called DataLounge and this pic was posted with this caption:
"I still maintain that Perry Noble is Pema Chödrön undercover."
http://www.gampoabbey.org/images/Pema-Chodron2.jpg

It made me laugh, which was a good break for me. I am becoming addicted to this case............

mom2many said...

Thanks for answering my question about the movie, Flightful. There are probably mamy factors that would affect how much blood was present -- passage of time before medical assistance, caliber of round, point of entry, existence of an exit wound, are a few I can propose off the top of my head.

Anonymous said...

I'm laughing too - I've been reading DataLounge thread about this case too but hadn't seen this pic yet !

Anonymous said...

Definitely mom2many, all of those things would affect.

I love this forum.

This morning has brought alot of speculation about whether gunshot wounds were visible or not - but whether they were obvious or not, this was a situation where (from the affidavit) David Blackburn walked in through his front door and found Amanda Blackburn face down in blood on the living room floor and hid the truth about the real situation.

With all of the disturbances of belongings around her, duct tape beside her, tooth knocked out, and on it goes... I am sure he wanted to avoid police presence as long as possible and didn't want to be there when they arrived either.

The fact that they removed drywall and cleaned carpet and EMS had said it was a severe head injury indicate that this wasn't the situation I described in the movie which was just a really small head entry wound (surprisingly small, actually).

Either way, I hate to see us get bogged down in what type of wound it was when all of us know that DAVEY should've known it was crime scene and he failed to communicate that to 911 dispatch. Repeating myself I know, but it is whatever Davey said - or didn't say - that is going to be critical to analyze going forward. How much would all of us like to hear that recording right now !

I wonder if he had communicated accurately, if he would've been better off ? By trying to hide it, it implicates him even more.

flightfulbird

Anonymous said...

So davey posted another tweet of Amanda's journal, which she hated. He is so full of himself of course he posted one where she talked about him. Basically saying to trust what God is giving you, it may not be exactly what you're asking for but He knows what's best. "You have our best interest in mind even when you are making it out in a way we never expected" Did anyone else see at the bottom of the left page, the last word is help and the top of the right page is me.

lynda said...

Anonymous Kate said...
I always found it strange that they pulled Amanda off life support so very fast. If you google. "brain dead miracle" you will fine many results where a person was declared legally brain dead, but came back to life. For as religious as these people claim to be, that plug was sure pulled quickly. I bet Daveyboy was sh*tting bricks when he found Amanda was still breathing

____________________________________________

Many, many posts ago i explained that if she was an organ donor, they move fast. Even tho you are on life support, the clock is ticking. Organs will start to deteriorate and the medical/supportive care to keep someone going uses a lot of staff and big money. Mainly tho, the fresher the organs, the better. If they can harvest within 24 hours, they're going to. After that, even tho they are still "alive" on support, the organs are not used.

Aside from 3 gunshot wounds, like i said before, it would be the condition of her face that told you how seriously she was injured. If Davey didn't even turn her over to describe her face, THAT would be incredibly telling, AND he should of been covered in blood from cradling her, turning her over and such. I hope they got his clothes for evidence.

Anonymous said...

"ABB said..

Okay. Now this is getting ridiculous. The mere fact that a bullet wound to the head 'might not' bleed out much or be quite so obvious to the naked eye; for beginners, we don't know where the bullet went into Amanda's head or how much it bled, but we DO know there were plenty of other injuries on this poor girls' body that would have left her lying in a pool of blood that could NOT have been caused by tripping over a damned ladder. Get real peeps. "

You missed my point and went off the deep end thinking that I was supporting DB by making that statement. Let me clarify...

What I meant to illustrate was that people keep saying that a gunshot wound to the head would have bled profusely, caused brain matter to be ejected, bone fragments, etc., and that it would be immediately clear that she had been shot. All I am saying is that that isn't necessarily true. It is possible, and I have witnessed it with my own two eyes, that a gunshot wound to the head can a) not bleed more than a little trickle, b) leave no gaping wound, bone, or brain matter and c) appear for all intents and purposes like someone has been beaten up rather than shot. My step-father looked like someone had beaten him in the eye/cheek area. We never thought for a minute he'd been shot. Until the ER found the bullet, we were working under the assumption he'd either been struck by lightning or had been assaulted.

And if you read further in what I wrote, I went on to say that EVEN in the event he didn't immediately recognize she'd been shot, the other visible clues should have been more than enough to make him believe she was not a victim of a fall down the stairs or off a counter or chair, e.g. the Cigarillos and the panties. So barring disbelief of any gunshot, there were other things that should have prompted a call to 911 indicating foul play and not an accident or injury.

I can't get past all the strange coincidences in this case either. It is beyond my ability to add all these things up and come to any other conclusion than he is somehow involved. But, I also have to temper this with the knowledge that strange and mysterious things happen every day and I guess that even people like DB win the lottery on rare occasion. So, if he's not involved, then the bizarre chain of events surrounding Amanda's death are defying odds that I can't comprehend. But, it's possible. And all his strange actions may just be a result of the fact that he wanted Amanda dead and she ended up dead and he's happy about it but still can't believe his good fortune.

AnonMaine (there, I'll use this from now on to identify my posts) :)



Anonymous said...

Louise K,

"I don't know what sort of fairy land you live in where a bullet to the back of the skull will enter without a hole or Obvious Bleeding, but it aint my world"

I live in the real world. My step-father shot himself with a .38 caliber pistol, point blank, in the skull and the hole, like I said earlier, looked more like a small scab that he'd picked off. There was no exit wound. The only blood was a small trickle coming from the wound. When a bullet is discharged is is incredibly hot and will sometimes cauterize the tissue it penetrates. This prevents excess bleeding.

I'm not saying this was the case with Amanda. I'm just saying that not all gunshots to the head produce the gore that we all expect from watching TV.

AnonMaine

Carnival Barker said...


DB knew it was a crime scene, he was just stalling for MORE time since that extra 40 minutes in the driveway wasn't quite enough. It's all in the affidavit. DB didn't talk to the cops until they met up at the hospital. He noticed the cigars while he was at home, though. Even if we take our brains out of our heads and say he didn't realize she was shot and just thought it was a wound from falling, HE SAW THE CIGARS AND KNEW THEY DIDN'T BELONG THERE. HE KNEW SOMEONE HAD BEEN IN HIS HOME! Yet, he didn't ask for the police.



lynda said...

I agree that a lot of bullet holes to the skull dont cause massive bleeding. The bullet was still lodged in her brain. No exit. But the force to the skull along with getting beaten in the face with a gun or fists would be the tell tale sign..oh, and that she had been shot in the back and arm too.

I am anxious to know whether or not DAvey discarded the clothes he was wearing because I think in the PC, didn't it say he was wearing scrubs? If he did have blood on him, was it before or after the EMt's got there? Was he clean and then make a show by throwing himself on her body when EMt's arrived. Their statements will also be very telling along with how they found her. Face up, on her side, or face down.

Confused said...

The Ayla Reynolds case is another one where they withheld the 911 call for months even though Justin DiPietro (the caller) was under intense suspicion.

When they finally released it, it was strangely "bland" in that it had no "red flags" or SA "tells" for either guilt or innocence. (Although I do believe he as well as Phoebe and Derek were involved and are guilty). I never understood why LE withheld the call although the public wanted it released. Peter even asked for it to be released, hoping something could be gleaned from it.

It almost makes you wonder if LE is sometimes, somehow, covering for some of the perps. How I cannot say or figure out, but 911 calls are public records, what is the point in withholding them, and then, when the Davey Blackburn 911 call is finally released, will it be as "bland" as Justin DiPietro's, where you can't extract anything from it??? Almost as if someone rescripted it and rerecorded it?

MzOpinion8d said...

None of the paperwork says she was shot on the stairs, and she wasn't found on the stairs. They found a BULLET HOLE at the BASE of the stairs and then found a bullet UNDER the stairs. It mentioned change (as in coins) was found on the landing of the stairs.

She had FOUR bullet holes:
1. Went in lower arm and traveled to bicep
2. In upper back area and
3. Back out of upper back area
4. Back of the head

Two bullets were recovered at autopsy. Shortly after the autopsy is when LE was back at the residence and saws were heard - I believe this is when they discovered the 3rd bullet was missing and went back searching for it, saw the hole at the base of the stairs, and had to remove a section to get under the stairs and recover that 3rd bullet (which must have been from the through and through shot to her upper back).

MzOpinion8d said...

Flightfulbird, when it said no one was found in the home except Weston, they just meant no one else was there, not that they FOUND Weston as if he'd been completely forgotten about. I seriously doubt DB was allowed to ride in the ambulance because they didn't know at that time that he wasn't responsible (we still don't know that!) and he couldn't have just left Weston there at the house.

Anonymous said...

Confusing though, because the affidavit should accurately describe the events of that morning.

Just trying to piece it together - this is cut/pasted word for word from the affidavit page 14 - caps mine for emphasis.

Affidavit says "At 8:44 Officers Richard Crosby and Larry Crowe arrived as Medics were carting Amanda Blackburn from the home. Amanda Blackburn had sustained severe head traume. Sergeant T Michael Wilson and Officer Carl Grigsby cleared the residence. NOONE ELSE WAS FOUND IN THE HOME, EXCEPT BLACKBURN'S YEAR OLD SON".


The Engine 12 crew was departing with Amanda when Officers Crosby and Crowe arrived at 8:44am.

Davey was not there at the house when these officers arrived, otherwise it seems they would've interviewed him there and the affidavit would've stated it. Whether he rode in the ambulance or not, he wasn't there when Metro Police arrived at 8:44am. Indeed, if officers had seen Davey accompanying the EMTs carting his wife toward the ambulance, the affidavit would've stated it.

Affidavit states that Sergeant T Michael Wilson and Officer Carl Grigsby cleared the residence.

Noone else was found in the home except for Blackburn's year-old son.


So it does indicate that detectives found Weston in the home, yes? If Weston was not in the home, they wouldn't have said he WAS in the home ! They would've said noone else was found in the home, period.

Nobody else was found, meaning Davey, perpetrators, friends or family - just Weston.

Again, just trying to piece things together this morning.

flightfulbird

Anonymous said...

***When they finally released it, it was strangely "bland" in that it had no "red flags" or SA "tells" for either guilt or innocence.***

I didn't realize the 911 call had been released. I saw excerpts from it here:

http://www.centralmaine.com/2014/02/03/transcripts_detail_justin_dipietro_s_911_call_reporting_ayla_reynolds_missing_/

But not the actual recording or an official transcript. Even in just the few quotes the newspaper published there were some red flags from what I saw. Dropped pronouns, overly polite (using ma'am), self-editing from past tense to present tense.

And speaking of the monster himself... my friend was at the Lincoln County Courthouse today (12/17/15) and he walked past her. People were calling him a baby-killer. He was appearing for his OUI charge.

AnonMaine

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