Mollie Tibbetts case investigators keeping details near the jacket, key questions remain unanswered



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Investigators investigating the disappearance of Mollie Tibbetts, a student at the University of Iowa, kept the details of the case on Monday, refusing to spell out the state of the house where she had stayed, even in the middle of new information suggesting the house. Rick Rahn, a special officer in charge of the Iowa Criminal Investigations Division, would not go into details as to whether officials found signs of forced entry into Brooklyn, Iowa, at the She had remained on the date of her disappearance, or if the investigators found indications of one or more unknown persons on the property.

Rahn, noting the details of the house being part of the ongoing investigation, said that the authorities were not aware. all connection between the disappearance of Tibbetts and the ongoing search for a man in Pella – a town about an hour away – that was captured on video surveillance on Friday morning taking pictures of high scho

Tibbetts, a sophomore college student, was last seen jogging on July 18th. Current research for her, which included properties like a pig farm, has come to short. The police did not announce any suspects in his disappearance.

But the case seemed to tumble over the weekend when KCCI reported that family members had shown that Tibbetts was doing homework on his computer late on the evening of July 18th. This suggests that she returned home after her jog and that she did not run away, as previously thought.

The house is owned by his boyfriend, whom the cops formally excluded as a suspect. Tibbetts stayed there to watch his dogs while he was working on a construction site in Dubuque, about 100 miles northeast. She was reported missing on July 19 after failing to report for work.

"What we need is that people tell their friends and neighbors that if they saw something that seemed strange, they were calling the authorities." Rob Tibbetts, the father of the 20-year-old girl said Monday at ABC's Good Morning America. "The authorities have told us again and again that all similar cases are still resolved by counsel."