TaupinJohn
Active Member
This case is one of "those" -- the ones that get in my mind (via my heart, I presume) and stays there.
The parts that stick in my mind are:
*That he went to his vehicle (presumably to toss in some light bulbs, because God forbid he'd have to lug those heavy things to his office with him) to check on the progress of his dying son. And when he saw that baby still alive, still savable.... he, with no emotion, carried on as if nothing was wrong. It wasn't a case of losing his temper and beating a crying child to death (as horrific as that act is) -- this was... that baby was in good spirits, happy to be with his dad (as per the Chik Fil-A cams.)
He had HOURS to reconsider murdering his child. He had to have heard (and seen, in my opinion) him suffering, clawing his own face in desperation... yet he did and felt nothing. That just isn't a man at all, it's a monster.
*And I keep wondering if Cooper was conscious and aware (and God help me, I think he was) when he heard his dad's door open and thought relief was finally there. What he'd so desperately hoped would happen did: his dad came back. And then he had to hear that door slam again. I HATE this pig for what that baby felt when he realized what he HAD to have realized at that moment.
*Also, I haven't heard too much criticism over this, but it floors me: How his mother Leanna, at Cooper's funeral (or memorial, I think funeral) gave her WTF-Speech about all the things her child wouldn't have to "endure" since he was dead and all. It was mentioned that she included "the death of his (Cooper's) parents" -- but she also said things like how he wouldn't have to go through "heartbreak" and "middle and high school."
Maybe "middle school" and "high school" sucked for her (the uglier kids had it worse than some, granted, so yeah...) but to say Cooper is somehow "lucky" for not "having to" experience them?
He won't experience heartbreak? What about the heartbreak he experienced when he realized his own father knew he was fucking ROASTING ALIVE and did nothing, NOTHING, to help him?
She's... she's making her husband out to be some sort of savior to his son ("He was a wonderful father and leader of our family!")
Another thing (I apologize for the length of my posts, I swear I try to edit/shorten them but I clearly suck at both) that I think about is.... When Leanna's mother (Cooper's grandmother) asked her daughter, "Why aren't you crying/reacting?" (I'm glad this was on speaker so it was heard) is very telling, in my opinion. Leanna's answer, "I must be in shock" -- oh you stupid, stupid, woman! When you're in shock, you can't explain that you're in shock, because... oh fuck it, you know what I mean. It's just... it's obvious to me that her mother knew right then that something was very wrong with that picture.
And few people know a person better than their own mothers: they know when we're upset before WE even know it sometimes. And they know when we're lying and guilty as all hell. (Reminded of Darlie Routier's mom, the day after the murders, asking her daughter, "Is there something you need to tell me?" That bitch knew. I don't give rat's ass what she said back then or says now: She knew then and she knows now. And so did Cooper's grandmother, who probably would've taken little Cooper and given him a chance to experience that first heartache (and also that first love) and those awkward days of high school (and also the rewards of graduating and beginning a life.)
Let me quickly add (God, I'm sorry) one more thing: Fatty McGee there did NOT drive one mile before "remembering" his son was in that car. No. When he got his fat ass in that driver's seat, he had to have smelled the horrific and unmistakable stench of death. I won't go into the other probable odors emitting from his dead son (who's little head was only inches away from Pig Daddy's own) but that DID NOT HAPPEN. He stopped where did because he needed people to witness him reacting. There is zero chance he started that car and drove one inch without knowing exactly what he'd done.
Again, apologies for the length of this. May Karma do what our justice system cannot: give them exactly what they gave that beautiful child... tenfold.
The parts that stick in my mind are:
*That he went to his vehicle (presumably to toss in some light bulbs, because God forbid he'd have to lug those heavy things to his office with him) to check on the progress of his dying son. And when he saw that baby still alive, still savable.... he, with no emotion, carried on as if nothing was wrong. It wasn't a case of losing his temper and beating a crying child to death (as horrific as that act is) -- this was... that baby was in good spirits, happy to be with his dad (as per the Chik Fil-A cams.)
He had HOURS to reconsider murdering his child. He had to have heard (and seen, in my opinion) him suffering, clawing his own face in desperation... yet he did and felt nothing. That just isn't a man at all, it's a monster.
*And I keep wondering if Cooper was conscious and aware (and God help me, I think he was) when he heard his dad's door open and thought relief was finally there. What he'd so desperately hoped would happen did: his dad came back. And then he had to hear that door slam again. I HATE this pig for what that baby felt when he realized what he HAD to have realized at that moment.
*Also, I haven't heard too much criticism over this, but it floors me: How his mother Leanna, at Cooper's funeral (or memorial, I think funeral) gave her WTF-Speech about all the things her child wouldn't have to "endure" since he was dead and all. It was mentioned that she included "the death of his (Cooper's) parents" -- but she also said things like how he wouldn't have to go through "heartbreak" and "middle and high school."
Maybe "middle school" and "high school" sucked for her (the uglier kids had it worse than some, granted, so yeah...) but to say Cooper is somehow "lucky" for not "having to" experience them?
He won't experience heartbreak? What about the heartbreak he experienced when he realized his own father knew he was fucking ROASTING ALIVE and did nothing, NOTHING, to help him?
She's... she's making her husband out to be some sort of savior to his son ("He was a wonderful father and leader of our family!")
Another thing (I apologize for the length of my posts, I swear I try to edit/shorten them but I clearly suck at both) that I think about is.... When Leanna's mother (Cooper's grandmother) asked her daughter, "Why aren't you crying/reacting?" (I'm glad this was on speaker so it was heard) is very telling, in my opinion. Leanna's answer, "I must be in shock" -- oh you stupid, stupid, woman! When you're in shock, you can't explain that you're in shock, because... oh fuck it, you know what I mean. It's just... it's obvious to me that her mother knew right then that something was very wrong with that picture.
And few people know a person better than their own mothers: they know when we're upset before WE even know it sometimes. And they know when we're lying and guilty as all hell. (Reminded of Darlie Routier's mom, the day after the murders, asking her daughter, "Is there something you need to tell me?" That bitch knew. I don't give rat's ass what she said back then or says now: She knew then and she knows now. And so did Cooper's grandmother, who probably would've taken little Cooper and given him a chance to experience that first heartache (and also that first love) and those awkward days of high school (and also the rewards of graduating and beginning a life.)
Let me quickly add (God, I'm sorry) one more thing: Fatty McGee there did NOT drive one mile before "remembering" his son was in that car. No. When he got his fat ass in that driver's seat, he had to have smelled the horrific and unmistakable stench of death. I won't go into the other probable odors emitting from his dead son (who's little head was only inches away from Pig Daddy's own) but that DID NOT HAPPEN. He stopped where did because he needed people to witness him reacting. There is zero chance he started that car and drove one inch without knowing exactly what he'd done.
Again, apologies for the length of this. May Karma do what our justice system cannot: give them exactly what they gave that beautiful child... tenfold.