Ordinary activities become suspicious


On the day of Samira's death, police interviewed neighbours. One neighbour told police that Dr. Frasch hadn't looked happy the day before Samira had died and had put on weight. Suspicious?

At their beach home, a neighbour told police that Dr. Frasch had been behaving erratically, driving forwards and then backwards on the street. Suspicious?

Prosecutor Georgia Cappleman drew attention to how on the day of the murder Dr. Frasch had gone and purchased a gas cap for his wife's Hummer. Suspicious?

Yes, one has to be careful to leave the house looking cheerful and trim, otherwise it might look suspicious. 

As for the erratic driving, Dr. Frasch was driving away from his beach home and realized he had forgotten to check the mailbox. He backed up to get the mail. 

And in one of the many documentaries made about this case, Prosecutor Georgia Cappleman put forward the idea that Dr. Frasch had gone out to purchase a gas cap for his wife's Hummer in an effort to establish an alibi for himself, so that he could then go home and pretend he had discovered the body. At the same time, her State Investigator, Jason Newlin, was telling the world that Dr. Frasch was on the run after murdering his wife, heading for the Gulf of Mexico where he had a boat waiting for him. 

So which was it? A thirty-minute drive out of his way to buy a gas cap? Or driving like a bat out of hell to make his getaway?

Maybe Samira Frasch's Hummer just needed a gas cap. In fact, when they had stopped at the mechanic the day before that's what he had said and had offered to place an order for one for them. Dr. Frasch had declined, deciding to just pick one up for her himself. It was one of his first errands that day, after leaving his wife alive and heading out with the girls to give her a "Mommy's Day Off." 

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