Luin minä skoone sinun viestisi, siksihän kirjoitan "ei ole tosiaan", eli siis muualla ei ole tätä vaihtoehtoa juurikaan käsitelty.
Dyatlov Pass -sivuston perustaja pitää lokakuussa 2019 antamansa haastattelun mukaan retkeläisten kohtalona asemiehiä. Kappas vaan=) En ole lukenut tätä aikaisemmin. Tässä vaan on vähän hölmö selitys, että asemiehet jättävät porukan metsään ja palaavat takaisin teltalle. Ja sillä aikaa retkeläiset sytyttävät nuotion, mutta rosmot palaavat ja kolkkaavat heidät hankeen.
Tietääkseni teltalta ei kuitenkaan viety ainakaan mitään julkisesti tiedettyä. Kyllä ne halutut kamat olisi otettu heti mukaan, ja näin ollen nuotion täytyisi kuulua rosvoille.
Were They Murdered?
All of the strange circumstances so puzzled Teodora Hadjiyska that she launched DyatlovPass.com as a comprehensive archive of many documents and images related to the case. Born in Bulgaria, she's one of the few people who has taken the time to translate the many Russian files into English, and has created a comprehensive database of all the photos, evidence and theories, making her an expert on the tragedy.
In an email interview, Hadjiyska says the information that's publicly available – either by ineptitude, or more ominously, by design – doesn't fully explain what happened to the hikers. She's also far from convinced that the government is trying to truly solve the case rather than using half measures to pacify families still yearning for answers.
After years of picking through the information, she has her suspicions about what transpired on that frozen mountain.
Her take? The hikers were murdered.
Hadjiyska says she thinks that something alarmed the group and they clambered out of the tent. Then, her theory goes,
armed people confronted them and there was a brief scuffle.
"
The hikers were marched down to [to the tree line to] die from exposure. They didn't know that. They thought the perpetrators [were] after their belongings. So, they complied," she says. Certain that their victims would quickly perish in the life-draining cold, the murderers wandered back to the tent.
The half-naked group frantically – perhaps miraculously – managed to start a campfire, which alerted their foes, who rushed back down the hill to finish them off. By then, the three who were wearing more substantial clothing had moved away from the fire in a bid to create a shallow snow den to survive the night. But soon they were found, too, beaten to death, and then dragged to the creek.
"It still lacks the who and why, but [this scenario] explains the mysterious behavior of the hikers. It is a murder, [so] it doesn't have to make sense," says Hadjiyska. "Little can be safely deduced from the facts, but at least
there is no doubt that somebody helped them die."
She feels certain that
the group was under attack in three separate instances – at the tent, then the tree line and then at the snow den. "The whole ordeal must have taken hours. Even if something scared them at the tent (fireball, avalanche, yeti) that something had to follow them to the cedar after they had the time to make the fire."
That's because building a fire takes time – which means that the hikers were under the impression that they would make it through the night. They also had the time and energy to make the den. "And then something really awful happened to whoever was left alive while they were not in the den."
She believes this hypothesis shows
a pattern of assailants following the group and escalating the attack, amid unbearably cold and perhaps blizzard-like conditions, where confusion and panic affected all parties.
Perusteoriani 2017:
https://murha.info/rikosfoorumi/viewtop ... 82#p838837