Anonymous ID: f28bd3 April 16, 2023, 11:59 a.m. No.18705069   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18704606 lb

>Molly was murdered 36 hours before Seth Rich

>There is a suspect named in the tweet below

>Molly, and Seth, were killed in the Coup against our Republic

 

>>18704867 lb

>dafug

>check out the name of the cop

One extra L difference

Baltimore

Dallesandro

D'alesandro

 

Who killed Roland Park resident Molly Macauley?

 

Loved ones, police continue to search for answers 1 year after homicide

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WBAL Updated: 8:08 AM EST Nov 22, 2017

 

BALTIMORE —

 

It's been more than a year since a Roland Park resident was stabbed to death while walking her dogs, and still there is no justice and no closure for Molly Macauley's family and friends or the detective who's determined to get answers.

 

Macauley was found in the 600 block of west University Parkway in July of last year. Only about a block away from her house.

 

She'd just come home from watching her beloved Orioles when investigators said she set out to walk her dogs as she did almost every night.

 

"I mean, it's still shocking. It's still horrible," friend Karen Palmer said.

 

Palmer said she often wakes up, thinking that what she experienced in her dream is reality, that her friend and co-worker of 25 years, Macauley, is still alive, sharing her wisdom, and smile.

 

"Like, is this the real world? Or is it the world where she's not there? The real world and it's just really hard and, you know, it's been over a year," Palmer said.

 

Macauley, who was a renowned aerospace researcher, was stabbed to death as she walked her two big dogs the night of July 8, 2016, and there are still no answers.

 

"You know she knew her neighborhood. She was a careful person. She was a street-savvy person, so how did this happen?" Palmer said.

 

Palmer and the Baltimore police detective leading the investigation, Sean Dallessandro, are determined to keep the case in the forefront of people's minds.

 

"We're always looking for that witness, somebody to call, somebody to give us that one tip. This one's rather puzzling, which is nerve wracking to say the least," Dallessandro said.

 

Macauley's dog walk along relatively quiet University Parkway at 10:47 p.m. was a routine route for her. The killer seems to have appeared out of nowhere and stabbed her several times. She was found on the ground covered in blood, still holding on to the dogs.

 

Police didn't find a weapon. It didn't appear to be a robbery, and the only apparent witnesses are neighbors who heard her scream.

 

"You know this didn't have anything to do with drugs. It didn't have anything to do with a domestic incident. It didn't have anything to do with the core of what our homicides usually are," Dallessandro said.

 

Macauley was the vice president for research at Resources for the Future, a think tank in Washington, D.C. She was a pioneer in space economics, testified before Congress and sat on expert panels.

 

Dallessandro has enlisted help from the FBI.

 

"There was a few good ideas that they had, which (are) things that I explored, and there's a few things that I'm exploring now," Dallessandro said.

 

He's pushed on by hopes of providing some sense of closure.

 

"And figure out why, and who. I mean, it's just really tragic and not fair at all, not fair," Palmer said.

 

The detective said there have been different people of interest in the case, but as of now he's ruled them all out.

 

Metro Crime Stoppers is offering a reward of $10,000.

 

The D’Alesandros: a Baltimore political powerhouse that gave us two mayors and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi

By Colin Campbell

 

Politics

The D’Alesandros: a Baltimore political powerhouse that gave us two mayors and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi

By Colin Campbell

Baltimore Sun

Oct 21, 2019 at 8:48 pm

Image 1 of 5

Thomas D'Alesandro Jr. and his wife Nancy pose for a photo with their children including Thomas D'Al

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is to the far right in this photo of the D'Alesandro family at the dining

Surrounded by family, windswept Mayor D'Alesandro Jr. prepares to sail on Carribean cruise from New

Mayor Thomas D'Alesandro Jr. with his wife & children including Thomas D'Alesandro III on far left i

Thomas D'Alesandro III and his wife, Margaret D'Alesandro in 1952.

 

Thomas D'Alesandro Jr. and his wife Nancy pose for a photo with their children including Thomas D'Alesandro III on the far right. (File photo)

 

The D’Alesandro family, a political dynasty with two former Baltimore mayors and the first female speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives to its name, rose from a small house on Albemarle Street in Little Italy.

 

And while the second mayor in the family, Thomas D’Alesandro III, had been out of office for nearly a half-century at the time of his death Sunday, his sister Nancy Pelosi is speaker of the House of Representatives, third from the presidency and the top-ranking Democrat in Congress.