








Fakt pěkná galerka mě se siku moc nelíbí ale tenhle stieger jo .
m. on Sunday, June 18 - Father's Day - left her Brooklyn apartment, heading a few blocks down Fulton St. to fill out a job application at an Applebee's restaurant. Four days later, her strangled body was found in a trash bag on Kingston Ave. in Crown Heights. The coroner concluded Chanel was killed less than a day before her body was found, raising the question of where she was between June 18 and June 22. Chanel hadn't been sexually abused. She hadn't been robbed, although her cell phone and sneakers were missing. And there were no rope burns or other signs that Chanel had been forcibly confined, suggesting she either knew and trusted her killer, or thought she could get out of the situation, or didn't see any point in struggling. It's been nearly four months since Chanel's murder and despite the cops' efforts - bolstered by hundreds of flyers throughout the neighborhood and a segment on "America's Most Wanted" - the killer has not been found. The cops on the case are banging their heads against the wall and they need a break. Someone knows what happened to Chanel. And someone needs to come forward. Now. Stein has assigned the case to "the two Bobs" - Robert Carboine, who has 17 years on the job and is working on the case full time, and Bobby Rivera, a veteran with 20 years on the job, 16 of them as a detective in the 77th, who's working part time on the murder. When more manpower is needed - to canvass a block, for instance, talking to people for clues - the brass at 1 Police Plaza gives it to them. "We've spent thousands of hours on this," says Stein, who was working the case on July 4, wandering into backyard barbecues asking questions. "This case has taken us all over the tristate area and beyond.
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