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People offered him phone calls, money, cab rides, whatever help he needed. His home was not far away--a short drive. He knew who he was. He knew he had a car. He knew his briefcase had been stolen. He told one person offering help that he had money. He refused all help! And he didn't go home. That says fear to me. He was afraid to go home--and that was very likely connected to the four days of loud TV over Christmas (something going on in his home), the torn up floorboards in the kitchen (whether the police did that, looking for something, or Wheeler did it himself, or his assailants did it), the smoke-bombs and his cell phone across the street, and other indications that he was hiding out, out of fear. And his visit to the law office points to something he was supposed to do in Wilmington.
The other rather obvious thing about his behavior is that he was in and out of a fog. He had moments of confusion and moments of decisiveness--purposefulness, planning. He organizes himself, gets shelter for the night, sheds his suit coat, gets a hoodie sweatshirt (it was cold), hesitates all the next day then goes up to the law office. He changes his mind again, abruptly, leaves the building and then is murdered and his body dumped in Newark.
The "fog" is characteristic of interrogation/control drugs. It wipes parts of memory but they can come back, with time. It induces obedience to commands, but this, too, wears off. He was a strong character, with military training, a "bulldog" personality and certainly knowledge of interrogation/control techniques--and very intelligent. His behavior is very like someone with those characteristics fighting off the "fog" of such a drug--trying desperately to clear his head. We can almost see that struggle going on, inside of him, as he paces the corridor near the parking attendant's window in the wrong parking garage. What is real? What isn't real? Where is his goddamn car? Why isn't it here? If only he had his briefcase with the parking ticket in it. Oh, yeah, they took it. But, but, but....
This is NOT someone suffering from a stroke or other medical condition. It is possibly someone who got hit on the head in a mugging, but there is no wound, and what happens next? Does he have the attendant call the police or emergency services? Does he have anyone who offers help call the police or emergency services--or his doctor, or his friends or his employer or his West Point buddies? Does he take money offered, get a cab and go home to sleep it off and deal with things in the morning? No. He organizes himself for the night to DO something the next day in Wilmington. And it looks very like his decision about that "something" is what got him killed.
We may not ever know the "whole story" but we can certainly piece together what we know and apply our reasoning powers to it.
For instance, the bits and pieces we know from news reports about the law office incident point to a decision by Wheeler that prompted him to leave without speaking to anybody. I have no idea whatsoever if anybody in that law office (which has many lawyers) knew what Wheeler's mission was, or was a contact person of some kind. He asked for the "managing partner" but you'd think that he would ask for such a person by name, if he knew him or her. Then he abruptly leaves and is soon killed.
That was the first account that came out. Then later there was a statement by one of the lawyers (not the "managing partner") that Wheeler had come to the law office to borrow train fare. How did this lawyer know this, if the first account is correct, that Wheeler didn't speak to anyone (except the receptionist)? (The first account said nothing about train fare.) If that is really why Wheeler (who had told others that he had money) visited the law office, why didn't he ask for someone by name? You don't just walk into a law office and expect to be given money.
And, in any case, where would Wheeler have been going by train? His brief case had been stolen. He had no cell phone. Something bad had happened to him. He was out of communication with everybody in his life. He was disheveled, without a change of clothes. He had no coat--it was very cold. The logical place for him to go was home--he needed a ride there, not a train ticket--but home seemed to be off limits. IF the "train fare" explanation is true--and I don't think it is--it could be that he'd run out of money, was afraid and just wanted to escape this nightmare. But the fact that he refused all other help indicates that he was not likely asking for help at the law office. He was there for another reason. And, whatever it was, he changed his mind about it, walked out without talking to anyone and ended up in a landfill.
Lawyers might lie for a lot of reasons that don't mean criminal complicity. So I'm not saying anyone there knew why Wheeler came in. But the lie doesn't wash. It doesn't make sense that Wheeler would refuse all other help and then go into the law office and ask the "managing partner" for train fare. It was something else that he was there for, and it was very likely the something that got him killed. The law office lawyers may have had nothing at all to do with it--just like the cabbie whose telephone number was found in Wheeler's cell phone may have had no knowledge of how his cab was to be used. Just as that specific cab may have been chosen--and the number given to Wheeler--so that the cab could be followed, the "managing partner" or some other lawyer might have been chosen because he represented the perps in some other matter and would have been unaware of what some message from Wheeler to the perps meant.
What we can know with a good degree of confidence, from the known facts about Wheeler, is that his two day stay in Wilmington--refusing all help to get anywhere else--and that ended with his murder--was purposeful, contained organized behavior on his part to stay in Wilmington and was likely aimed at this law office visit. It was a hard decision for Wheeler, whatever it was. He'd had time to think about it. He'd had time to clear his head. He goes in, then changes his mind abruptly and walks out, and ends up dead.
That is what makes sense from all the known facts, at this point. What we may never know--if it was some top secret government or corporate matter--is why.
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