Helping Survivors, LLC

Helping Survivors is an online advocacy group dedicated to helping survivors of sexual assault and abuse. They recently added a guide specific to child sexual abuse:

helpingsurvivors.org/child-sexual-abuse/

Here is a link to the website:

Helping Survivor’s objective is to keep survivors focused on growth. 

We aim to define sexual assault and abuse for our readers in a way that is both clear and concise. Different situations are introduced throughout the website, and the actions, causes, treatments, and potential side effects are explained in layman’s terms. Safety tips are provided alongside helpful definitions and other situational recommendations.

Additional actionable items included on the site are recommendations for preparing to report sexual assault and abuse to authorities and finding helpful support groups.

Helping Survivors Website

Question–

Does anyone have any idea how to find out who worked in corporate security for General Motors in 1977 and 1978? I’m told these employees were often ex-law enforcement.

Comment below or contact me via OCCKTruth@protonmail.com. Thanks.

Private labs are able to produce more extensive DNA profiles than state labs.

This is a fascinating article about the level of work that went into arresting Bryan Kohberger for the vicious murder of four University of Idaho students.

DNA from a knife sheath left at the scene did not match match any past criminal offenders, so the Idaho State Police contracted with Othram, Inc., “which had a lab able to produce a more extensive DNA profile from the knife sheath than the state lab was set up to examine.”

I have been screaming this into the wind for more than a few years. DO NOT tell me how many times your state lab has tested the evidence in the OCCK case. This goes for cases like the murder of JonBenet Ramsey, too. Face it, state labs are not as sophisticated as some of these private labs. And their “retesting” just extinguishes evidence while it yields no answers.

Of course all of this presupposes that a law enforcement agency takes its obligation to a murder victim seriously enough to carefully store, catalog and keep track of all of the evidence. Like maybe in 1999 when Michigan agencies were on notice about DNA evidence when they dug up David Norberg to compare his DNA to ONE hair in this case. They could have cleaned up their act then. But why bother in this case, right?