Erin Valenti, CEO of Tinker Ventures, Found Dead In Trunk of Her Rental Car (deseret.com) 89
McGruber shares a report from Deseret News, a newspaper published in Salt Lake City: The body of Erin Valenti, a tech entrepreneur who had been missing since Monday, was found Saturday in the trunk of her rental car. The 33-year-old Valenti was the CEO of Utah-based Tinker Ventures, a company that develops web and smartphone applications.
In a Wednesday Facebook post, Valenti's husband, Harrison Weinstein, wrote that she had been missing since Monday night and was last seen in Palo Alto Monday afternoon and was wearing "torn jeans and a white T-shirt." Valenti was scheduled to receive an award at an event Wednesday hosted by Utah-based Women Tech Council but never appeared at the event in Salt Lake City, according to organizers. Police said the Santa Clara County Coroner's Office will determine the manner and cause of death and have not released any further details on the incident.
In a Wednesday Facebook post, Valenti's husband, Harrison Weinstein, wrote that she had been missing since Monday night and was last seen in Palo Alto Monday afternoon and was wearing "torn jeans and a white T-shirt." Valenti was scheduled to receive an award at an event Wednesday hosted by Utah-based Women Tech Council but never appeared at the event in Salt Lake City, according to organizers. Police said the Santa Clara County Coroner's Office will determine the manner and cause of death and have not released any further details on the incident.
Re:Let this be a lesson (Score:5, Insightful)
And be sure to force the ACs in your house into cognitive therapy.
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I'm serious. You started to confess to a serious crime. Don't stop now just because you've been modded down.
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Hmm...
let us be grateful that the legal website requirements are something like 90 days to 2 years to keep information.
we have our first suspect, or prankster or possible lead.
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The article suggests it was a Nissan Morono but those don't have "trunks".
One of the first articles I saw said "trunk", but it has since been updated to say back seat.
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In my '84 VW Jetta, I once stowed two 500 series Tektronix 'scopes in the trunk. Those are big scopes, btw.
Re: Found dead in trunk? (Score:2, Offtopic)
Pro tip: if you can see them, so can the cops.
Re:Found dead in trunk? (Score:5, Funny)
Friend of mine was checking out new cars for his wife. She needs a mobility scooter. So when the salesmen would show him a model, he would whip out a measuring tape and check out the trunk dimensions. One salesman was being a pest and was bugging him about why he was measuring the trunks.
My friend didn't say anything but turned around and measured the salesman.
Re:Found dead in trunk? (Score:4, Interesting)
That's great and all, but salesmen fold, especially once they stop resisting. "Can I lift that?" becomes a more relevant measure than "will it fit?"
But, like the time I trained a cat to be afraid of table salt, threats don't always have to make sense. The cat was known for stealing seats the moment they opened up, so I grabbed a salt shaker, a butter knife, and a fork and shook out a little salt. The cat just looked at me like "wtf", so I scraped the knife and fork together. Still no reaction. Then I poked the cat with the fork (not very hard) and it took off like a shot, almost knocking the chair over. From that point forward, all anyone had to to do get the cat to vacate a seat was threaten it with a salt shaker.
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Phhht. Amateurs. Even back in WW2, we had the technology to store thousands in a single ash tray.
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Funny that you mention that.
I was looking at a car the other day
and said, WTF where's the trunk?
it could barely hold to suite cases.
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Yeah. I hate it when that happens [ausmotive.com].
Tinker Ventures? (Score:1)
Coincidences (Score:5, Interesting)
Valenti's the 2nd tech company CEO in about two weeks to be found dead in a car. First one I saw was out in Santa Cruz, name was Tushar Atre [latimes.com]. Similar companies too, web design or digital marketing.
Re:Coincidences (Score:5, Informative)
One more point: these decedents were found about 20 miles apart: Atre at 24000 Soquel San Jose Rd, Valenti at 6500 Bose Lane (2nd para) [deseret.com]. If I've got the right locations mapped, this is the Google Maps link between them. [google.com]
So: Two CEOs of web development companies, killed about 20 miles apart...
Re:Coincidences (Score:4, Informative)
20 miles apart by road -- but less than 8 miles apart on a direct line, and the region in between is nature preserve.
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and the region in between is nature preserve.
Clearly it's the work of Chupacabra.
Re: Coincidences (Score:1)
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Considering their profession "web design or digital marketing". The real question is why should anyone care? 5 homeless junkies probably died within that same area, in the same time period and they likely offered the world more.
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You don't think it was Hans Reiser?
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Isn't he still in Jail? it's a pretty good alibi.
Worse: Back seat, not trunk (Score:3)
Mod parent up. (Score:2)
A day after Erin Valenti was found dead in the back seat of her rental car on a street in San Jose's quiet Almaden neighborhood, questions are emerging about how authorities handled her missing person case.
San Jose police Sgt. Enrique Garcia said, via email, that police are conducting "a death investigation" after discovering a body Saturday in the back of a car in the 6500 block of Bose Lane in San Jose.
Found Dead In Trunk of Her Rental Car (Score:1)
Now, FINDING it in the dark while you're all tied up and / or dead is a different matter. But Congress passed a law so it's all OK.
I sure am glad they're making new laws all of the time, those older ones were just hard to read and enforce.
Re:Found Dead In Trunk of Her Rental Car (Score:4, Funny)
Turns out the switch doesn't work if you are dead. :/
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Needs an ejection mechanism and a life support monitor.
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Yes most suicide victims either tie their hands behind their back and then shoot themselves twice in the back of he head or put themselves in the boot of a car before driving to the middle of nowhere.
Given that she was found dead in the back seat of the car, not shot, not tied up, and not in the boot, could you perhaps be on the same drugs she may have been on? According to a family member she thought she was in the Matrix when she talked to them on the phone.
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According to a family member she thought she was in the Matrix when she talked to them on the phone.
Those goddamn cats...
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Someone built that road (even if it is a dirt road) from point A to point B. The same goes for footpaths - they need a certain amount of traffic to remain visible.
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From the San Jose Mercury News:
"A day after Erin Valenti was found dead in the back seat of her rental car on a street in San Jose’s quiet Almaden neighborhood, questions are emerging about how authorities handled her missing person case."
BACK SEAT.
That car does not have a trunk.
Father questions San Jose police response (Score:5, Informative)
Valenti’s family went to the police, who spoke to her by phone and went looking for her, but were not able to locate her, her family said. But Joseph Valenti said despite all of the information his family gave the police — the make, model and license plate of her rental car, descriptions of her erratic behavior on the phone, and data tracking her last phone call to the Almaden neighborhood — police didn’t file an official missing person report for Erin Valenti until Thursday. And when they did, they described her as voluntarily missing, Joseph Valenti said. The police told the family that she was an adult, and she could have just taken off for a few days, her father said. The result, he said, was that the department didn’t make searching for her a priority.
“That’s bullshit,” Joseph Valenti said, “because she was due for a flight out of San Jose airport back to Salt Lake City.”
Disappointed with the police department’s response, the family set up a “Help Find Erin Valenti” Facebook page, and received an outpouring of love, support and Bay Area locals who volunteered to search. It was one of those Facebook volunteers who finally found Erin Valenti’s gray SUV parked at the curb of a suburban San Jose street, looked inside, and discovered her body in the back seat, Joseph Valenti said.
The family still doesn’t know how Erin Valenti died, her father said. Her husband, Harrison Weinstein, had previously said she had no history of mental illness. Officials have not released a time of death or commented on how long she was in the car before being found.
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Yea, someone in that police department knows more than they're saying.
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The internet knows more as well. Like not normal home location, so likely google maps was used or what ever equivalent, you have a route from one location to another, which would be provided every time, so how did travel differ, one what point did it change, so what happened there or shortly there in after. We do not even know the cause of death, from petty panicky thief and blow to the head to a pissed off developer who felt they were not going to get the share of what they believed would be a really prof
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Alternative theory: That police department didn't give a shit. Remember, police have no duty of care.
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Record the missing person report, ascertain that this is an adult with no history of mental illness, compare and contrast to the last 780 missing person reports of adults with no mental illness, realise that 779 of them turned up alive having been merely out of contact for a day, decide not to expend scarce resources searching for someone that's probably not missing.
Yes, that is indeed entirely the care and attentiveness I've learned to expect from the police.
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Given that ten times as many people in the USA die in traffic accidents each year as there are adults _reported_ missing, and given that many missing person reports are for adults that aren't in any danger or difficulty, perhaps seeking to reduce incidences of dangerous driving is a reasonable priority.
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People always think their own issue is the most pressing, and it is, for them. Meanwhile, the police have an entire city to keep up with and are generally doing their jobs about as well as the rest of us do. The woman is an adult, there was no reason to expect foul play, and the cops probably know that most people who don't turn up when and where they are supposed to eventually turn up. All the people who preach process and planning expect the world to suddenly reconfigure itself in response to an emergency
Back of vehicle, not trunk (Score:5, Informative)
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Similar to the Jessica Kalish murder (Score:2)
in 2009 software exec Kalish was murdered by her wife [miaminewtimes.com] Carol Burger, and put into the trunk of her car which was left a few miles from their home. The Kalish family when talking to police emphasized their suspicions that Burger was responsible, but there was a lot of delays until police finally entered the blood soaked home, to find Burger had shot herself.
We also have the example of Reiser. And so many others.
While it would be very bad to pursue the husband while ignoring other leads, we need a better mecha
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Worry not, they ALWAYS suspect the husband and family before strangers because the statistics say it's highly likely the death was done by a family member, friend or acquaintance.
In fact based on previous incidents it's actually more likely they will spend 99% of their time investigating the husband before investigating any stranger. You need look no further than many prior cases where the police focused in on the husband when there was no evidence whatsoever of their involvement. Even though her Husband wa
May she rest in peace (Score:1)
It is not for is to make suppositions. Her family needs answers from the authorities, not internet trolls.
The Husband did it.. (Score:2)
My wife watches those crime shows on TV, where they investigate murders... I can tell you that the Husband ALWAYS did it... I don't think I've ever seen one of those shows where it wasn't the significant other who offed the victim and tried to hide the body.
The Murano doesn't have a trunk (Score:1)
drugs or stroke or bipolar (Score:1)
They must have known something. (Score:2)
Guessing these two CEO's have something to rival Facebook, or discovered the NSA's backdoor in their apps...