forced entry, and there was none. the doors were locked. windows were all intact. either the killer knew her or she let the person in. in any event it certainly did not look like a robbery turned deadly. she still had the watch on and her tennis bracelet on and a charm stuck in her hair that was on a necklace that wasn t around her neck and she had money sticking out of the pocket. maybe diane s body would tell the story. the killer had hidden her under a bedspread. it appeared she was strangled. could have been a rope or flex bands used to exercise. clearly not somebodies hands. no. what about her eyes and face. she had it in the eyes. she appeared to have a bruise on the cheek like a rubbing type of a bruise. she had four of them on her
was on a necklace that wasn t around her neck and she had money sticking out of the pocket. maybe diane s body would tell the story. the killer had hidden her under a bedspread. it appeared she was strangled. could have been a rope or flex bands used to exercise. clearly not somebodies hands. no. what about her eyes and face. she had it in the eyes. she appeared to have a bruise on the cheek like a rubbing type of a bruise. she had four of them on her stomach. a rubbing type of bruise. as if you were being dragged across the carpet. we also found a spot of urine where her body would have been. she must have been killed there and dragged behind the bed where they found her body.
in northwest austin. the detective learned if the call out did not tell them much, the crime scene probably would. when diane was murdered. we had the body. we had the scene. that was all in the beginning. they looked for evidence of forced entry, and there was none. the doors were locked. windows were all intact. either the killer knew her or had a key to the house or she let the person in. in any event it did not look like a robbery turned deadly. she still had the watch on and her tennis bracelet on and a charm stuck in her hair that was on a necklace that wasn t around her neck and she had money sticking out of the pocket. maybe diane s body would tell the story of what had happened to her. the killer had hidden her under a bedspread. it appeared she was strangled. a ligature mark around her
they looked for evidence of forced entry, and there was none. the doors were locked. windows were all intact. either the killer knew her or she let the person in. in any event it did not look like a robbery turned deadly. she still had the watch on and her tennis bracelet on and a charm stuck in her hair that was on a necklace that wasn t around her neck and she had money sticking out of the pocket. maybe diane s body would tell the story. the killer had hidden her under a bedspread. it appeared she was strangled. could have been a rope or flex bands used to exercise. clearly not somebodies hands. no. what about her eyes and face. she had it in the eyes.
Life is Strange: True Colors Gets Nintendo Switch Rating
Life is Strange: True Colors has received a rating from the Entertainment Software Rating Board, but more interesting than the rating itself is one of the platforms the game’s been rated for. While the rating includes the expected platforms like the Xbox and PlayStation consoles as well as the PC, it also includes a Nintendo Switch version. No Nintendo Switch version of the game has been announced at this time, but that may change in the future if the ESRB listing is any indication of what might happen.
The rating was spotted not long after it went up by Twitter users such as Wario64 who highlighted the Switch reference as the standout part of the rating page. According to the ESRB, the game’s currently been rated for the Windows PC, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Stadia, Nintendo Switch, Xbox One, and Xbox Series consoles. It mentions the Switch once more in the note that informs players there’ll be in-game purchases on